On Jul 20, 2013, Nanny23 from Mount Sterling, KY (Zone 6b) wrote: To make new plants invert and place in a bucket of water. On Oct 29, 2013, greene33 from Vernonburg, GA wrote: Very tropical looking but apparently mostly hardy for our area. I think I'll make sure to harvest some seeds this summer or at least keep a start or two in the garage over winter in case we get another freakishly cold night or two next winter. It actually did fine in cool weather and kept on growing and putting out new shoots until we had a very unusually cold snap in December, down to 10 degrees F overnight. I wrapped a drip hose around the base of it a few times so it would get watered often. Each stem was huge, at least 2 inches in diameter at the base. I had it in the ground all year in part sun, and by fall it was about 7 feet tall and growing faster than any plant I have. Unlike what some others have said, I have had good luck with this plant in the Vancouver WA/Portland OR area. On Apr 2, 2014, jv123 from Chehalis, WA (Zone 8b) wrote: Rocks on the bottom, w vermiculite to grow in.īut I have to be careful as this type of plant is salad for my kitties! I have it outside in original pot till I figure how to keep it in a larger pot w good wetness. I am going to say positive for finding it!! A big surprise indeed!! On May 21, 2014, ILuvCannas from Staten Island, NY wrote: In Mississippi, it may survive? Can't wait to purchase one of the larger versions! I may leave it out in the cold this winter to see what happens. I had no idea that it was a water plant! Everyone compliments this plant and I will purchase more in the future. I planted it in a soil container garden and it has grown like crazy. I purchased Baby Tut not knowing anything about it, much less what it was called. On May 25, 2014, sugarpie777 from New Hebron, MS wrote: The person that originally planted it here was a landscape architect. I was not aware, until deciding that I wanted to plant more of it in a similar area and looked on this site for some information on growing it, that it needs a lot of water and must grow in a wet location. It got to 19 degrees last winter and it died back, but came back quite well. Only water is from rain, which sometimes is plentiful and other times nonexistent. It has been growing well and I have never watered it, not even once. I moved to a home with a lot of papyrus growing on the west side of the home in full afternoon sun and no sprinklers on it. On Sep 10, 2014, zenalea from Hilton Head Island, SC wrote: read more is not a small plant - it's really large, but it's more tall than wide, and it does not take up all it's space - so you can interplant it. Then when it heats up, it's off and growing again. I have a cold room (in the high 30's to the 50's in the Winter) and it does very well. It's hardier than some say - as long as the roots don't freeze - though it only will survive really cold conditions outside for about 2 months. It grows fast, looks spectacular, and you can cut it way back and overwinter is pretty easily (if you live in a cold place like me that is). This is for the species and not any cultivars of it - the wild papyurus - that gets enormous (or the title is incorrect). The comments should be moved over as the plant are quite different (I've grown both). On Jul 2, 2015, lokidog from Logan, UT wrote:įirst this is not the place for "Baby Tut" - that's a different species (C. This plant is said to grow outdoors in the following regions: Inconspicuous/none Bloom Characteristics:īy dividing rhizomes, tubers, corms or bulbs (including offsets)įrom seed stratify if sowing indoors Seed Collecting:Īllow seedheads to dry on plants remove and collect seeds Regional Suitable for growing in containers Danger: USDA Zone 11: above 4.5 ☌ (40 ☏) Where to Grow: Very high moisture needs suitable for bogs and water gardens Sun Exposure: Tropicals and Tender Perennials Water Requirements:
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