Hardiness Zone Revamp!

Here in southeastern Pennsylvania, the old hardiness zone of 6b has changed thanks to a warmer, wetter climate of late. According to the USDA, the Lehigh Valley is now considered zone 7a.

Welcome news? A little mixed, actually.

Crocus in early March

Plants to Try — Maybe?

I may not have a spot suitable for borderline-hardy plants, but maybe you do. Here are a few zone 7 perennials often touted as hardy to zone 6 “with protection” which I consider a safer bet. Everyone has their own micro-climate, so judge for yourself. Just know if you choose to plant any of these, you are taking a risk no matter what the salesperson (or tag) tells you.

Pink Muhly grass

Pink Muhly grass — A willowy, fine-textured grass prized for its bronzy-pink seedheads, culminating in a “pink haze” of color by fall. I fell in love with this grass and got to adore it for a single season before it promptly died over winter. If you can coax it to survive multiple years, bravo!

Hardy Camellia “April Rose”

Hardy Camellia “April” Series – Developed explicitly for colder climates by Dr. Clifford Parks of the University of North Carolina, this series of hybrids includes pink, red and white doubles. I planted April Rose in an “ideal” location and it still struggled in fits and starts. Late freezes were especially damaging, and the deer didn’t help matters. (They love the flower buds.) I finally pulled it out.

If you want to try an April series camellia, position it in a protected niche next to a warm wall, provide well-drained humus, afternoon shade, and give it a burlap wrap in winter. Once established I think they will do fine here. It’s those first couple of years when they’re young and tender that are so challenging.

Chinese Paperbush, Edgeworthia chrysantha

Chinese Paperbush (Edgeworthia chrysantha) – Here is an uncommon plant that I really covet. I still think it’s too risky to try an edgeworthia in this area unless you have the absolute ideal location, but I’m listing it anyway because it’s just. so. lovely! Admittedly this plant is still a rarity in the U.S. You’ll have to seek it out if you really want to try one.

Edgeworthias bloom very early, sometimes with the witch hazels in late winter. The silky, fragrant, golden-ombre blooms are simply exquisite. As you can see from the photo above, the form is semi-dwarf, compact and spreading, wider than it is tall. If you’ve got a spot by a warm wall or in front of a bank of windows where you can admire it on chilly days, you might give it a try. Edgeworthia is rated hardy to zones 7 or “6 with protection”. So… edgy, but surely worthy!

Crepe Myrtles — What’s not to covet about Southern myrtles in their saturated colorful robes in August! Numerous cultivars are touted as hardy in zone 6a, but really, for how long? Now that we’re in 7a can we grow them? Perhaps in a very secluded location you can get one to thrive for years. It does seem to be getting easier.

In the past, I’ve watched multiple myrtles thrive in other people’s yards for a few seasons only to suddenly die. Let’s hope as the hybrids get hardier and our winters warmer, local survival rates will improve. For now, consider a crepe myrtle for a protected niche shielded from prevailing winds. Perhaps like the cardinals, crepe myrtles will gradually become a common sight here as the climate continues to evolve.

These are just a few tender possibilities for those extra warm and protected nooks and crannies. Who knows, maybe we’ll soon be able to grow oleanders and more magnolias and other Southern delights!


No matter what zone you’re in, our weather is changing–wetter, stormier, hotter, more destructive. The best we can do is cope and adapt as best we can, helping our garden plants do the same. I try to look on the bright side and appreciate whatever new specimens will thrive that I couldn’t grow before. So bring it on, zone 7b– let’s see what new and exciting combinations we can create over the next few years!

A Pennsylvania gardener

2 comments

  1. Crepe myrtles…sigh…if I had a dollar for every one that died on me. There are some very beautiful large specimens in the area but sadly not in my yard. I lived in Wilmington DE for several years. It’s a definite zone 7 there and it makes a difference.

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