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wghydrangeatips

Untitled Document

Hydrangeas can live for many years without ever needing to be pruned, but if your shrubs grow out of bounds or lose flowering vigor, then there are some essential pruning guidelines you must follow to ensure bountiful blooms the next year!

Hydrangea macrophylla and H. quercifolia
These generally bloom on old wood and require little pruning. Prune spent blooms immediately after flowering (midsummer), or remove only dead, damaged or unsightly wood.


Hydrangea Endless SummerŪ

Hydrangea macrophylla (Bigleaf, Mophead, or Lacecap Hydrangeas)
These Hydrangeas begin blooming in early to midsummer and can continue until summer's end, so they set their bloom buds during late summer or early fall. When pruning mopheads, you have two options, and will probably end up doing a combination of both:

  1. Cut back the flowering shoots to the next bud, thus giving the branches a trim that removes the spent blooms without damaging the buds that will bloom next year. Do this right after flowering, but before midsummer.
  2. On older shrubs that have lost flowering vigor, cut up to a third of entire stems at the base in late winter to improve flowering vigor. Ideally, you should cut the oldest stems, leaving younger mature stems that are loaded with buds for next year, but sometimes you have a lopsided or crowded Hydrangea that must be pruned to maintain a pleasing shape. The main purpose of cutting off entire stems is to do away with elderly or poorly flowering parts of the shrub, thus letting in more air and light AND encouraging the growth of healthy new branches. In mild climates that may experience warm spells in winter, be careful of the urge to get out in the garden and start pruning before late winter. If you prune too early, you could encourage dormant buds to break, leaving tender growth susceptible to frost and freeze damage.
Exception: If you have a reblooming variety such as new Penny Mac that flowers on new wood as well as old wood, you'll want to prune a little every year just to keep the new wood coming.
Hydrangea quercifolia 'Vaughn's Lillie' Hydrangea quercifolia (Oakleaf Hydrangea)
You can get away without pruning Oakleaf Hydrageas at all, but if you want to keep them well-shaped, cut dead stems back at the base in late winter or early spring.

Hydrangea arborescens and H. paniculata
These shrubs bloom on new wood and actually produce larger blooms if cut back to the ground in late winter.

Hydrangea arborescens (Smooth Hydrangea)
This is one of the easiest Hydrangeas to prune. Because it blooms only on new wood, you can just cut it back to the ground in late winter, before any new buds appear. If you experience some flopping of flowering branches, then leave a framework of old growth to help support the branches by only cutting stems back to 2 feet from the ground.
Hydrangea Quick Fire? Hydrangea paniculata (Pee Gee or Panicle Hydrangeas)
Prune this Hydrangea in late winter to keep the plants from becoming overgrown and encourage more new growth, more flower buds, and larger blooms. You can remove dead flowers, as soon as they become unattractive and clean up the overall shape of the plant.

Hydrangea petiolaris

Hydrangea petiolaris Hydrangea petiolaris (Climbing Hydrangea)
Climbing Hydrangea requires little to no pruning, but if you need to trim it to keep it in bounds, you should prune it just after flowering. Cut back last year's flower shoots to 1 to 2 inches and pruning out shoots that fail to cling or have pulled away from their support.
Remember, Hydrangeas are shade tolerant, but they do require adequate sunlight and irrigation to bloom properly. In northern climates and coastal areas, Hydrangeas will grow beautifully in full sun, but in warmer southern areas, a location in part shade where the shrub receives full to partial morning sun with protection from harsh afternoon sun is ideal. Placed in the right location, given ample moisture, and pruned using the guidelines above, your Hydrangeas will be an abundant source of gorgeous blooms long into the future.
Mophead (snowball-shaped) flowerheads of pure white spread up to 12 inches across, composed of many dozen florets. They are held up and out from large, mid-green foliage.
Hydrangea 'Annabelle'
$12.95
4-inch blooms that open pinkish-white, then mature to burgundy-rose on shrubs 3 feet tall, 4 feet wide.
Hydrangea 'Lady in Red' PP#15,175
NOW $22.46
4-foot-tall, 3-foot-wide shrub with oakleaf-shaped golden leaves and 6- to 8-inch white bloom trusses.
Hydrangea 'Little Honey' PP#15,477
$17.95
'Nikko Blue' reaches 6 feet tall with very large deep blue, globe-shaped flower heads.
Hydrangea 'Nikko Blue'
$19.95
Bloom panicles are 12 to 15 inches long, somewhat dome-shaped but tapered to a soft point.
Hydrangea 'Snow Queen' PP#4,458
$24.95
7- to 8-inch pink or blue mopheads with a bold picotee, serrated petal edges, and ruffling on compact plants 3 feet high and wide.
Hydrangea Angel Eyes™ PPAF
$24.95
8- to 8 1/2-inch flowerheads in the lacecap style with an outer ring of large pink or blue florets edged in white surrounding an inner circle of tiny flowers of pink or blue, all on plants 4 to 5 feet high and wide.
Hydrangea Angel Lace™ PP#9,500
$24.95
7- to 8-inch pink or blue mopheads with a bold picotee, slight serration, and very heavy ruffling on compact plants 3 to 5 feet high and wide.
Hydrangea Angel Smile™ PP#10,371
NOW $22.46
1- to 2-foot-tall, 3- to 4-foot-wide shrub with large, toothy green leaves and 8- to 10-inch fuchsia blooms.
Hydrangea Cityline™ Venice PP#10,928
$19.95
8- to 10-inch flowerheads of pink or blue in the rounded
Hydrangea Endless Summer® PP #15,298
$29.95
Climbing Hydrangea reaches 60 to 80 feet long with white flowers, green foliage, and exfoliating bark.
Hydrangea anomala ssp. petiolaris
NOW $22.46
Hydrangea arborescens Incrediball® PPAF
$19.95
Hydrangea arborescens Invincibelle™ Spirit PPAF
$19.95
Glowing Embers has pinkish-red flowerheads 8 inches or more across turning purple with age. Compact plant reaches 3 feet tall and wide.
Hydrangea macrophylla 'Glowing Embers'
$19.95
Hydrangea macrophylla 'Todi'
$12.95
Hydrangea macrophylla Abracadabra™ Star PPAF
$18.95
Hydrangea macrophylla Cityline™ Rio PPAF
$17.95
Hydrangea paniculata Little Lime™ PPAF
$24.95
Displays large, 12- to 16-inch blooms in midsummer that change from white to deep pink when mature on a plant that reaches 6 to 8 feet tall and wide.
Hydrangea paniculata Pinky Winky™ PP#16,166
$19.95
'Pee Wee' reaches 4 feet tall and 3 feet wide with elongated panicles of white flowers. Foliage turns chocolate-burgundy in fall.
Hydrangea quercifolia 'Pee Wee'
$24.95
 

New plants and popular plants for 2009 Perennials for sun, shade, and indoors Flower bulbs for spring, summer, fall, and indoors Wayside's rose collection includes climbing roses and knockout roses Our great selection of dwarf, evergreen, and fruit trees We provide shrubs for full sun to shade Vines and climbing plants from Wisteria to Roses Internet exclusives of new and rare plants
Wayside Gardens online catalog of Perennials, Roses, trees and shrubs My Account Catalog Request FREE Newsletter Catalog Quick Order Order Status