Description
Canna Taney for Sale — The Self-Cleaning Longwood Orange Water Canna That Needs No Deadheading
If you’ve been searching for Canna Taney for sale, Quinn’s Fins grows Canna glauca ‘Taney’ right here in our on-site nursery greenhouse. Canna Taney is the fourth and final cultivar in the legendary Longwood Gardens aquatic canna series — developed by Dr. Robert Armstrong at Longwood Gardens in the early 1970s as part of the same breeding program that produced Endeavor, Erebus, and Ra. Like its Longwood siblings, Taney is a true water canna — a genuine *Canna glauca* hybrid bred specifically for water garden and aquatic marginal use rather than simply water-tolerant. Its soft apricot-orange to sunset orange iris-like flowers are open and self-colored, appearing on tall panicles above long, narrow, glaucous grey-green lanceolate foliage that is more slender and refined than the broader paddle leaves of many other cannas. Canna Taney for sale at Quinn’s Fins has one distinctive characteristic that sets it apart from every other canna in our collection — its flowers are fully self-cleaning, dropping away cleanly as they fade without forming seed pods or requiring deadheading. For pond margin gardeners who want the continuous bloom performance of a water canna without the weekly maintenance of spent flower removal, Canna Taney is the definitive choice.
Why Canna Taney for Sale Is the Low-Maintenance Choice in the Longwood Canna Series
Canna Taney delivers all the Longwood pedigree, aquatic performance, and visual appeal of the series with one practical advantage none of the others can match.
- Fully self-cleaning flowers — spent blooms drop cleanly without deadheading, seed pod formation, or manual removal
- Soft apricot-orange to sunset orange iris-like flowers — a warm, luminous color that bridges orange and apricot in a uniquely soft tone
- Long narrow glaucous grey-green lanceolate foliage — more refined and slender than broad paddle-leaved cannas; elegant architectural presence
- True water canna (Canna glauca hybrid) — bred specifically for aquatic and water marginal use by Longwood Gardens
- One of four Longwood aquatic cannas — the completing member of the Endeavor, Erebus, Ra, and Taney series
- Grows 3–5 feet tall — a slightly more compact scale than some other Longwood cannas, suitable for medium-sized water gardens
- Blooms summer through early autumn — continuous color throughout the pond garden’s peak season
- Non-toxic to fish, pets, and humans — completely safe for koi ponds, goldfish ponds, and family water gardens
The Self-Cleaning Advantage — What It Means in Practice
Every other canna in Quinn’s Fins’ collection — and most cannas in the hobby generally — requires regular deadheading to maintain continuous bloom production and keep the plant looking tidy. Spent flowers left in place form seed pods and redirect the plant’s energy away from producing new blooms. Canna Taney’s self-cleaning characteristic means its spent flowers drop away cleanly on their own — no pruning shears, no weekly maintenance rounds, no worry about missed seed pods. For pond margin gardeners who visit the water garden on weekends rather than daily, or who simply want a more hands-off planting, Taney’s self-cleaning habit is a genuine and meaningful practical advantage over all other cannas in the collection.
Completing the Longwood Aquatic Canna Series
Longwood Gardens produced exactly four aquatic canna cultivars through Dr. Robert Armstrong’s breeding program. Quinn’s Fins carries all four — a complete Longwood aquatic canna collection covering all four flower colors:
| Cultivar | Flower Color | Key Feature |
| Taney (this plant) | Apricot-orange | Self-cleaning — no deadheading needed |
| Erebus | Coral-pink to salmon | RHS Award; refined elegance |
| Ra | Soft pastel yellow | RHS Award; late season bloomer |
| Endeavor | Scarlet red | Deepest water tolerance (8″) |
Growing Canna Taney — Care at a Glance
Light
Canna Taney performs best in full sun — at least 6 hours of direct sunlight daily for most prolific blooming. It tolerates partial shade, remaining healthy and attractive though with somewhat reduced flower production. As a true *Canna glauca* hybrid, it has somewhat more shade tolerance than many terrestrial canna varieties.
Water Depth and Planting
Canna Taney is a true water canna bred for aquatic use. Plant in a 12″×12″ or larger container with rich loamy aquatic soil. Introduce to pond water gradually — increase water depth over several weeks as the plant establishes and produces strong new growth rather than submerging immediately. Place in the pond with water covering the pot to the desired shallow depth. Canna Taney also grows well in rich moist garden border soil, bog gardens, and permanently wet marginal settings outside the pond.
No Deadheading Required
Unlike all other cannas in our collection, Canna Taney does not require deadheading. Its spent flowers are fully self-cleaning — they drop cleanly on their own without forming seed pods or requiring manual removal. Simply allow the plant to bloom and self-maintain. Remove fallen flower material from the pond surface periodically to maintain water quality, but no active deadheading is necessary.
Fertilization
Canna Taney benefits from regular fertilization throughout the growing season. Use aquatic fertilizer tablets pushed into the container soil every 3–4 weeks in pond settings. In garden border and bog settings, a balanced granular or liquid fertilizer supports strong growth and bloom production. Fish waste in established koi and goldfish ponds provides natural supplemental nutrition.
Hardiness and Overwintering
Canna Taney is hardy in USDA Zones 8–11. In Zones 9–11, rhizomes can remain in the ground or pond year-round in mild winters. In Zone 8, mulch heavily and move pond containers to the shallowest sheltered area after frost. Below Zone 8, cut foliage to 6 inches after frost, lift rhizomes, and store in peat or vermiculite in a cool, dark, frost-free location at 45–55°F until replanting after last frost in spring. Note that Canna Taney rhizomes are long and thin — handle carefully during lifting and storage to avoid breaking.
Spread
Canna Taney is a slow tillerer — it spreads via rhizomes at a more measured pace than many other canna varieties, making it one of the easier cannas to manage in contained pond settings. Container planting is still recommended to control spread and simplify overwintering.
Nursery-Grown at Quinn’s Fins
Every Canna Taney for sale at Quinn’s Fins is grown right here in our on-site nursery greenhouse — not drop-shipped or bulk-sourced. Your plant arrives in a 2″ pot, healthy and ready to establish in your pond margin or water garden. We grow what we sell.
For more on growing Canna Taney and the Longwood water cannas in ponds and water gardens, visit the Pond Informer’s Longwood Canna care guide or browse our full selection of pond and water garden plants at Quinn’s Fins.
Canna Taney Plant Details
| Botanical Name | Canna glauca ‘Taney’ (syn. ‘Tangy’) |
| Common Names | Canna Taney, Orange Canna Taney, Taney Water Canna |
| Hybrid Origin | Longwood Gardens; Dr. Robert Armstrong, early 1970s |
| Series | Longwood Aquatic Canna Series — fourth and final cultivar |
| Family | Cannaceae |
| USDA Hardiness Zones | 8–11 |
| Height | 3–5 feet |
| Foliage | Long, narrow, glaucous grey-green lanceolate paddle-shaped leaves |
| Flower Color | Soft apricot-orange to sunset orange — self-colored, iris-like |
| Self-Cleaning | Yes — spent flowers drop cleanly; no deadheading required |
| Bloom Time | Summer through early autumn |
| Light | Full sun to partial shade |
| Water Depth | Moist soil to shallow water; introduce gradually |
| Spread Rate | Slow tillering — more manageable than faster-spreading cannas |
| Toxicity | Non-toxic to fish, pets, and humans |
| Overwintering | In ground Zones 9–11; mulch Zone 8; lift and store below Zone 8 |
| Pot Size | 2″ |
| SKU | 6116-1 |
| Price | $14.99 |







