Gardeners often say in jest, “Zone envy is real!” If you’ve ever visited beautiful gardens in a climate warmer than yours and wished some of those plants would grow for you, you’ve experienced zone envy. Maybe it is the regionality of flowers and plants like tropical palm trees and bone cold hardy lilacs that makes them so special. Read on, and you’ll see, however, that there is some middle ground to be explored between extremes, lying just outside of your own hardiness zone.
If you need a refresher on what a hardiness zone is, our article, Everything You Need to Know About Growing Zones for Plant Hardiness, can help.
You may be familiar with the general palette of perennials and shrubs that are hardy in your zone, including the ones you’re already growing in your garden. In the middle of the country where winters aren’t too extreme and summers aren’t unbearably hot, the plant palette is expansive. As you go further north or south, the palette narrows a bit.
That’s where it becomes tempting to “cheat your zone”, meaning to attempt to grow something that isn’t technically suitable for your climate. It’s risky, but some people have success cheating their zone by one or even two hardiness zones. That means if you live in USDA hardiness zone 6, you might have luck overwintering a plant that is listed as hardy to zone 7. However, as is true in life, you must be prepared to lose when you cheat your zone. The risk might be more palatable with a $20 plant than a $200 one – you decide what’s an acceptable level of risk for your budget.
Now, we’re going to help you do something your mother told you never to do – cheat! (Cheat your zone, that is.) Here are five factors that can play a pivotal role in your success or failure.