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Cold hardiness & minimum temperature

Is Small-flowered Pickerelweed (Pontederia parviflora)cold hardy? Hardiness zone & min temp

Also called Small-flowered Pickerelweed, Small Pickerelweed.

More about small-flowered pickerelweed

About Small-flowered Pickerelweed

Pontederia parviflora · also called Small-flowered Pickerelweed, Small Pickerelweed · flowering

Small-flowered Pickerelweed is a native aquatic marginal plant bearing slender spikes of violet-blue flowers above arrow-shaped leaves. It thrives in shallow water or consistently wet soil and performs best in full sun. Excellent for pond margins, rain gardens, and naturalistic water features; supports pollinators and provides wildlife habitat.

Cold limit: USDA 8-11 · RHS H3 (10–35°C)

Watch for — Frost damage to crowns: In zones below 8, crowns can be damaged by hard frosts if water freezes solid. Submerge baskets below the ice line (>30 cm depth) or overwinter indoors in a frost-free location.

What small-flowered pickerelweed's hardiness rating actually means

Small-flowered Pickerelweed is half-hardy (RHS H3). It survives a mild winter outdoors in a sheltered spot, but a hard frost kills it — so in colder zones it is lifted, potted, or grown as a tender plant. Its RHS rating of H3 means: Half-hardy — comes through mild UK winters outside but is killed by a hard freeze. On the US scale that maps to USDA 8-11 — 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 −5 to 1 °C — a light, short frost only. Small-flowered Pickerelweed shrugs off cold nights but a real, sustained freeze will kill it.

Concretely, for small-flowered pickerelweed as it gets too cold:

Can small-flowered pickerelweed go outside or overwinter — and where?

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 small-flowered pickerelweed can be outside. US growers can check USDA zones; UK growers should use the RHS hardiness ratings, which match the H3 figure above.

Frost protection for borderline small-flowered pickerelweed

Small-flowered Pickerelweed is right on a hardiness edge in many gardens, so if you are pushing it, these measures buy it the margin it needs:

Small-flowered Pickerelweed hardiness — frequently asked questions

Is small-flowered pickerelweed cold hardy?

Small-flowered Pickerelweed is half-hardy (RHS H3). It survives a mild winter outdoors in a sheltered spot, but a hard frost kills it — so in colder zones it is lifted, potted, or grown as a tender plant. Borderline outdoors. In its mild end of USDA 8-11 (and sheltered UK gardens) small-flowered pickerelweed can stay out; in colder areas it must be lifted, brought in, or treated as a frost-tender plant.

What is the minimum temperature small-flowered pickerelweed can survive?

Minimum survivable temperature is roughly about −5 to 1 °C — a light, short frost only. Small-flowered Pickerelweed shrugs off cold nights but a real, sustained freeze will kill it.

What hardiness zone is small-flowered pickerelweed?

Small-flowered Pickerelweed is rated USDA 8-11 and RHS H3 — Half-hardy — comes through mild UK winters outside but is killed by a hard freeze.

Can small-flowered pickerelweed survive winter outside?

It can live outside year-round only in the mildest, most sheltered part of USDA 8-11 or a frost-free UK microclimate. In colder zones, grow it in a pot you can move under cover, or lift its tubers/roots and store them frost-free over winter. A south-facing wall, free-draining soil and a dry winter position can push it a full zone hardier than the books suggest.

How do I protect small-flowered pickerelweed from frost?

Mulch the crown or root zone deeply with bark, straw or leaf-mould before the first hard frost. Move container plants against a warm wall or into an unheated but frost-free porch or greenhouse. Fleece the top growth on the coldest nights, and keep it on the dry side — dry roots survive cold far better than wet ones. Lift dahlia-type tubers or tender crowns after the first light frost blackens the foliage and store them somewhere cool but frost-free.

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