Cold hardiness & minimum temperature
Is Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' (Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night')cold hardy? Hardiness zone & min temp
Also called cascade violet night achimenes.
More about achimenes 'cascade violet night'
About Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night'
Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' · also called cascade violet night achimenes · flowering
Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' is a trailing hot water plant cultivar prized for deep violet-blue, flat-faced flowers that pour over basket edges all summer. Growing from tiny scaly rhizomes, it needs warmth, even moisture, and humid air to flower freely. After bloom it dies back to dormant rhizomes that are stored dry and cool, then restarted with warm water in spring.
Cold limit: USDA 9-11 (lifted/stored dormant elsewhere) · RHS H1b (18-27°C)
Watch for — Premature dormancy: Drying out or chilling can stop growth early. Maintain warmth and steady moisture through summer to keep the cascade in bloom.
What achimenes 'cascade violet night''s hardiness rating actually means
Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' is not cold hardy. It is a tropical houseplant that dies if it is left out through frost — there is no zone where it overwinters outdoors in a UK or cold-US climate. Its RHS rating of H1b means: Sub-tropical — a normal warm home is fine, but it cannot go outside in a cool season. On the US scale that maps to USDA 9-11 (lifted/stored dormant elsewhere) — the zones where it can be left outdoors year-round.
New to these scales? The USDA hardiness zone map explained covers how the zone numbers work, and you can find your own zone with the zone finder.
Minimum temperature — and what happens below it
Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about 10 °C (sustained cold below this is damaging). Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' has no frost tolerance at all — it is an indoor plant in any climate with a real winter.
Concretely, for achimenes 'cascade violet night' as it gets too cold:
- Below about about 10 °C, growth stalls and the leaves start to show cold stress — dark, water-soaked, or yellowing patches.
- A single light frost blackens the foliage; a hard freeze kills the whole plant, roots included, and it does not recover.
- Even a cold, draughty windowsill or an unheated porch in winter can be enough to damage it permanently.
Can achimenes 'cascade violet night' go outside or overwinter — and where?
- It can holiday outdoors in summer once nights are reliably above 10 °C, in shade or dappled light, hardened off gradually.
- Bring it back indoors well before the first autumn frost — do not wait for a frost warning, move it when nights drop toward 10-12 °C.
- It will never overwinter outside in a temperate climate; the indoors is its winter home, full stop.
Work back from your local frost dates with the frost-date calculator: the last spring frost and first autumn frost are what really decide when achimenes 'cascade violet night' can be outside. US growers can check USDA zones; UK growers should use the RHS hardiness ratings, which match the H1b figure above.
Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' hardiness — frequently asked questions
Is achimenes 'cascade violet night' cold hardy?
Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' is not cold hardy. It is a tropical houseplant that dies if it is left out through frost — there is no zone where it overwinters outdoors in a UK or cold-US climate. Indoor-only in almost every home. Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' can only live outside year-round in genuinely frost-free climates (roughly USDA 9-11 (lifted/stored dormant elsewhere)); everywhere else it is a houseplant that summers out at most.
What is the minimum temperature achimenes 'cascade violet night' can survive?
Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about 10 °C (sustained cold below this is damaging). Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' has no frost tolerance at all — it is an indoor plant in any climate with a real winter.
What hardiness zone is achimenes 'cascade violet night'?
Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' is rated USDA 9-11 (lifted/stored dormant elsewhere) and RHS H1b — Sub-tropical — a normal warm home is fine, but it cannot go outside in a cool season.
Can achimenes 'cascade violet night' survive winter outside?
It can holiday outdoors in summer once nights are reliably above 10 °C, in shade or dappled light, hardened off gradually. Bring it back indoors well before the first autumn frost — do not wait for a frost warning, move it when nights drop toward 10-12 °C. It will never overwinter outside in a temperate climate; the indoors is its winter home, full stop.
What happens to achimenes 'cascade violet night' below its minimum temperature?
Below about about 10 °C, growth stalls and the leaves start to show cold stress — dark, water-soaked, or yellowing patches. A single light frost blackens the foliage; a hard freeze kills the whole plant, roots included, and it does not recover. Even a cold, draughty windowsill or an unheated porch in winter can be enough to damage it permanently.
Keep reading
- Achimenes 'Cascade Violet Night' care — the full brief (light, water, soil, problems, pet safety)
- USDA hardiness zones — find yours and what grows there
- Is achimenes 'cascade violet night' hardy in the UK? — the RHS-rating version
- RHS hardiness ratings — the UK system explained
- Frost-date calculator — your real outdoor window
- The USDA hardiness zone map, explained
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