Koi Avens
A Cheerful Coral Spark for Twin Cities Summer Borders
Koi Avens (Geum coccineum 'Koi') lights up early-summer gardens with warm coral-orange flowers held on wiry stems above a tidy mound of scalloped green foliage. It blooms when many perennials are just waking up, bridging the gap between spring bulbs and high summer. Whether you're edging a sunny border in Edina, filling a cottage bed in Maple Grove, or adding warm color to a Woodbury entry garden, Koi delivers weeks of cheerful blooms that early pollinators love.
Koi Avens Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Botanical Name | Geum coccineum 'Koi' |
| Mature Size | 12–16 in. tall, 12–14 in. wide |
| Hardiness Zone | 5–9 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a — best in sheltered, well-drained spots) |
| Light | Full sun to part sun |
| Bloom Time | Late spring into early summer, with scattered rebloom |
| Flower Color | Coral-orange |
| Soil | Average to moist, well-drained — dislikes soggy winter soil |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable in zone 5a; mulch in exposed zone 4b sites |
| Deer Resistance | Rarely browsed |
Landscape Uses
Koi shines at the front of a sunny perennial border, along a path edge, or grouped in drifts of three to five for a ribbon of warm color. Its compact habit suits small Twin Cities yards and containers, and the long bloom stems make excellent small cut flowers.
Pollinator gardens: Early flowers feed bees and butterflies when little else is open. Pair with catmint, salvia, and hardy geraniums for a season-long pollinator buffet.
Best Time to Plant Koi Avens in Minnesota
Plant in spring (late April–May) so roots establish over a full season, or in early fall (late August–mid September). Avoid midsummer planting. Because Koi sits at the cold edge of its range here, a protected, well-drained location gives the best long-term results.
How to Plant Koi Avens
Dig a hole twice the width of the pot and the same depth. Loosen heavy clay and mix in 20–30% compost to improve drainage — Geum dislikes wet feet, especially in winter. Set the crown at soil level, backfill, water in well, and mulch 2 inches deep, keeping mulch off the crown. Space plants 12–14 inches apart.
Watering Koi Avens
First year: Keep evenly moist — water every 2–3 days for the first few weeks, then taper to weekly. Stop supplemental watering 2–3 weeks before the ground freezes.
After year one: Water during dry spells; established plants prefer steady moisture but never standing water. Sharp drainage is the key to surviving Minnesota winters.
Q: Will Koi Avens survive a Minnesota winter?
It is hardy to about zone 5 and reliable in warmer Twin Cities microclimates. In exposed zone 4b sites, choose a sheltered, well-drained spot and add a winter mulch layer. Soggy soil is the most common cause of winter loss.
Q: Is it deer-resistant?
Yes — deer and rabbits rarely bother Geum foliage, a real plus in browse-prone gardens.
Q: How long does it bloom?
Several weeks in late spring to early summer, with scattered rebloom if you remove spent flowers.
Q: Does it spread?
No — Koi forms a tidy clump. Divide every few years in spring to keep it vigorous.
You May Also Like
Hardy Cranesbill (Geranium): Long-blooming, deer-resistant companions for sunny borders.
Blanket Flower (Gaillardia): Carries the warm orange-and-red theme into late summer.
Catmint (Nepeta): Cool blue-purple spikes that contrast with Koi's coral tones.