UK hardiness
Is Trewithen Blue Ceanothus hardy in the UK?
Ceanothus arboreus 'Trewithen Blue'
More about trewithen blue ceanothus in the UK
Trewithen Blue Ceanothus and the RHS hardiness rating
Trewithen Blue Ceanothus is rated RHS H3 — half-hardy, meaning it withstands winter minimums of about -5 to 1°C. In practice that means it survives outdoors only in mild or coastal areas, ideally with winter protection (fleece, a sheltered wall). The RHS rating describes an absolute minimum temperature, not an average: a single hard frost below its band is what does the damage, so the question is always "what is the coldest night my garden gets?", not "what is a typical winter here?".
This follows the RHS plant hardiness rating system (H1a–H7), the UK standard. For the US growing-zone view, see the trewithen blue ceanothus USDA hardiness guide.
Does UK region change it?
UK winters vary far more by locality than by latitude. Mild western and coastal areas (the south-west, Pembrokeshire, western Scotland's coast) and urban heat islands run several degrees warmer than inland frost pockets, valleys, and exposed eastern sites at the same latitude. A plant marginal on its RHS rating often survives in a sheltered town garden but fails 20 miles inland — so judge by your own coldest recorded night and microclimate (a south-facing wall, a courtyard) rather than the regional average.
Overwintering trewithen blue ceanothus in the UK
For a borderline-hardy plant, the UK winter killers are not just cold air but cold wet roots and wind. Improve drainage before winter, mulch the root zone, move containers to a sheltered spot or against a warm wall, and use horticultural fleece on hard-frost nights. Established plants in free-draining soil take far more cold than a recently planted one in heavy, wet ground.
Trewithen Blue Ceanothus UK hardiness — frequently asked questions
Is trewithen blue ceanothus hardy in the UK?
Trewithen Blue Ceanothus is rated RHS H3 (half-hardy, hardy to about -5 to 1°C). It survives outdoors only in mild or coastal areas, ideally with winter protection (fleece, a sheltered wall).
Can trewithen blue ceanothus stay outside over winter in the UK?
In most of the UK, yes, if your garden's coldest night stays within its RHS H3 band (around -5 to 1°C). In colder inland or northern gardens, give it a sheltered spot, sharp drainage, and fleece on hard-frost nights.
What does RHS H3 mean?
RHS hardiness ratings run H1a (needs a heated glasshouse) to H7 (survives below -20°C). Trewithen Blue Ceanothus's rating, H3, means half-hardy — it tolerates winter minimums of about -5 to 1°C. The rating is an absolute minimum, not an average.
How do I overwinter trewithen blue ceanothus in the UK?
For a borderline-hardy plant, the UK winter killers are not just cold air but cold wet roots and wind. Improve drainage before winter, mulch the root zone, move containers to a sheltered spot or against a warm wall, and use horticultural fleece on hard-frost nights. Established plants in free-draining soil take far more cold than a recently planted one in heavy, wet ground.
Does UK region change whether trewithen blue ceanothus survives?
UK winters vary far more by locality than by latitude. Mild western and coastal areas (the south-west, Pembrokeshire, western Scotland's coast) and urban heat islands run several degrees warmer than inland frost pockets, valleys, and exposed eastern sites at the same latitude. A plant marginal on its RHS rating often survives in a sheltered town garden but fails 20 miles inland — so judge by your own coldest recorded night and microclimate (a south-facing wall, a courtyard) rather than the regional average.
More trewithen blue ceanothus care
See the full trewithen blue ceanothus care guide, its temperature & humidity needs, and the US (USDA) hardiness version of this page.