Replacing the indispensable plants in the pond after each harsh winter is tiresome and also awkward. The solution: Hardy pond plants.

Winter hardy shore plants save a lot of work and are also decorative

When planting in gardens, it is always ideal to use plants that can withstand our weather without much effort. This can also be easily implemented for your own pond.

In the following, we have compiled bank plants and aquatic plants for you, which can also withstand severe frosts in winter. After that, we will also explain to you what needs to be considered when caring for hardy pond plants.

Hardy shore plants

In the cold season, the pond plants not only have to be able to withstand the frosty air temperatures, but also the possibly frozen water surface. Below we present some hardy plants for the banks of your garden pond, most of which are permanently fresh to moist.

  • Creeping Bugle (Ajuga reptans):
    The bugle is growing wonderful as a ground-covering pond edge perennial, also between the stones. The dark red foliage and the beautifully shaped rosettes are a real eye-catcher. It is also extremely vigorous and adorns itself with large violet flower candles in May. As a native plant, it does not require any special winter protection.
Günsel
The Günsel is doing wonderfully on the bank of the pond
  • Lady's Mantle (Alchemilla vulgaris):
    The semi-tall perennial is widespread throughout Europe and inhabits moist, calcareous and nutrient-rich soils. The lady's mantle is hardy, but should be cut back after flowering so that it sprout again before the cold winter season. The young leaf rosette then survives cold temperatures unscathed.
  • Common water daffodil (Eupatorium cannabium):
    The ones with us native wild perennial grows very well even on wet surfaces. The pink to reddish flowers do not appear until July, but can then be seen well into October. The common water daffodil ishardy in all locations in Central Europe, as it goes into the ground as a perennial in autumn.
Wasserdost
The water daffodil attracts many insects in summer
  • Real meadowsweet (Filipendula ulmaria):
    The real meadowsweet feels very comfortable in the semi-shade at the edge of a garden pond. All other species, such as the Little Meadowsweet (Filipendula vulgaris), are also hardy here. Due to the salicylic acid it contains, it has an analgesic and fever-reducing effect. Therefore, a tea is often prepared from the dried flowers in folk medicine.
  • Marsh Cranesbill (Geranium palustre):
    This geranium prefers shady to half-shady locations on the edge of the pond. The violet flowers appear from July to September. Wild populations can also be discovered on native marshy meadows. Special winter protection measures are therefore not to be taken.
Cranesbill
The bright flowers of the marsh cranesbill are hard to miss
  • Pennywort (Lysimachia nummularia):
    The vigorous pennywort grows likes moist, nutrient-rich soil. It makes a wonderful groundcover and produces small yellow flowers from June to August. Coinwort, as it is also known, is native to Central Europe and is usually hardy.
  • Meadow knotweed (Polygonum bistorta):
    The plant with the beautiful tall, light pink inflorescences blooms from May to June. The meadow knotweed is quite keen on spreading and is therefore a wonderful ground cover for near-natural bank plantings. Most knotweed plants are hardy in our latitudes. However, protective measures may be necessary in particularly harsh situations.
Knotweed
The knotweed is also one of the hardy riverside plants

Hardy Floating Plants

Floating plants have the opportunity to absorb most of the nutrients in the water, so less algae form. Another advantage is a closed floating plant cover, which shades the water below and also effectively prevents algae growth. However, it is advisable to keep at least 50% of the water surface free to ensure adequate gas exchange. The following floating plants are characterized by their good winter hardiness:

  • Frog Bite (Hydrocharis morsus-ranae):
    This aquatic plant that forms rosettes feels best in soft, low-lime water. The circular, heart-shaped leaves are reminiscent of those of water lilies. For hibernation, the frog bite forms permanent buds that sink to the bottom of the pond and sprout again in spring. In small ponds with a low water level, however, the permanent buds must be removed and overwintered in an aquarium.
Frog
The frog bite has its own hibernation strategy
  • Triple Duckweed (Lemna trisulca):
    This cruciform duckweed is distributed worldwide, but rarely flowers in Central Europe and instead reproduces vegetatively. In the fall, it forms starch as a reserve and sinks to the bottom of the pond, where it overwinters until spring.
  • Dwarf Waterlily (Nymphaea tetragona):
    The small dwarf waterlily is suitable also very good for ponds with low water levels. There are multicolored cultivars, all of which are hardy and can remain outdoors all year round. An exception is the yellow-flowered hybrid Nymphaae helvola, which is not completely frost resistant and must therefore be overwintered indoors.
Dwarf
The flowers of the dwarf water lily appear from June to September, depending on the location
  • Crab claws (Stratiotes aloides):
    The water aloe - like also called the crab claw - forms rosettes of sword-shaped leaves with serrated edges. It comes to the surface of the water only to flower. In autumn, the mother plant sinks to the bottom of the pond and forms so-called turions (also called stick sprouts) as overwintering organs. New daughter plants develop from this in winter.
  • Floating fern (Salvinia natans):
    The floating fern counts towards the fern family and, in contrast to the frog bite, needs calcareous water to thrive. The leaves, which cannot be wetted by water, float on the water surface. In autumn the plant dies and sinks to the bottom of the pond along with its spores. The next spring, small new plants will form from it.
Floating
The leaves of the floating fern lie on the surface of the water

Expert care tips for the pond

You should remove unused plant parts such as withered leaves or fallen leaves from surrounding plants as soon as possible to prevent them from falling onto thesink to the bottom of the pond and rot there. Brown shoots, for example from water lilies and other floating plants, should also be cut off and removed in late autumn at best.

Note: If a lot of plant remains rot in the water, there is an extreme accumulation of nutrients, this is also referred to as "eutrophication". This oversupply of nutrients promotes the growth of algae and thus the clarity of the water suffers on the one hand, and on the other hand the other plants also suffer. For some species, which are considered hardy, it is advisable to place the plant basket one water zone lower to prevent the plant from freezing. Don't forget to put the basket back in its original place in the spring.

See our review article here for more hardy plants.

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