Plant care
Beehive Gingertemperature & humidity
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More about beehive ginger
Ideal temperature for beehive ginger
Aim for 18–30°C (64–86°F) on the thermostat and you've handled the easy part. The hard part is the half-metre around the plant: window glass that drops to near-freezing on a January night, a radiator pumping out hot dry air, a draught from an opened front door. Move the plant 30 cm and you've usually fixed the problem. Below roughly 18°C the damage starts — soft blackened patches, translucent leaves, sometimes overnight.
Cold tolerance & winter care
Beehive Ginger is frost-tender (USDA 9–12, RHS H1a). It cannot survive a frost, so in most of the US and UK it lives indoors year-round or summers outside and comes back in well before the first autumn frost — once nights drop toward 10-12°C is the cue, not the first frost warning. Acclimate it over a week when moving between indoors and out so the leaves do not shock.
Humidity for beehive ginger
Beehive Ginger sits happiest at around 60–90% relative humidity. High humidity is essential, reflecting the plant's humid forest origin; under glass in temperate climates, run a humidifier or mist the foliage regularly. Plants dry-stressed by low humidity rarely produce the showy cone inflorescences at their best. The usual low-humidity tell is crisp brown leaf tips and edges while the soil moisture is fine — a sign the air, not the watering, is the problem. If you need to raise it, the reliable methods are grouping plants together, standing the pot on a tray of damp pebbles (the pot above the waterline, never in it), or running a small humidifier in winter when indoor heating dries the air most. Misting is the least effective — it raises humidity for minutes, not hours.
Beehive Ginger temperature & humidity — frequently asked questions
What temperature is best for beehive ginger?
Beehive Ginger grows best between 18–30°C (64–86°F). Keep it out of cold draughts, off freezing windowsills in winter, and away from the hot dry air directly above radiators — the extremes matter far more than the average room temperature.
How cold can beehive ginger tolerate?
Beehive Ginger starts to suffer below roughly 18°C. It is frost-tender and will be damaged or killed by a frost, so bring it indoors once nights fall toward 10-12°C.
What humidity does beehive ginger need?
Beehive Ginger prefers about 60–90% relative humidity. High humidity is essential, reflecting the plant's humid forest origin; under glass in temperate climates, run a humidifier or mist the foliage regularly. Plants dry-stressed by low humidity rarely produce the showy cone inflorescences at their best.
How do I raise humidity for beehive ginger?
Group it with other plants, stand the pot on a tray of damp pebbles (kept above the waterline), or run a small humidifier in winter. Misting only helps for a few minutes, so it is the weakest option for a plant that genuinely needs more humidity.
Can beehive ginger live outside?
Beehive Ginger is rated for USDA zone 9–12 and RHS hardiness H1a. Outside that range it must come indoors before the first frost — treat any outdoor stint as a summer holiday, not a permanent home.
More beehive ginger care
In the UK? Keeping beehive ginger warm in a UK home covers the radiator, single-glazing and heating-season humidity angle. Temperature and humidity are one piece. See the full beehive ginger care guide, its cold-hardiness guide, and watering schedule — humidity and watering problems are easy to confuse.