Hydrangea Next Generation® Pistachio

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Description / Hydrangea Next Generation® Pistachio
If you're already a lover of Hydrangeas, this gorgeous variety is a must-have. If you're new to gardening, you can make no better decision than to begin with this reblooming, compact, easy-care shrub for garden or container!
From late spring or early summer through fall, 'Pistachio' dazzles wit double blooms on wide, colorful heads. The pointed lime-green petals are brushed with scarlet, and shade to deepest blue at the center. You truly do have to see these flowers to believe them!
This shrub's ability to rebloom comes from the fact that it sets buds on both old (last season's growth) and new (this season's) wood. So even if a late spring frost nips the first set of buds back, you will have late-season blooms!
Extremely eye-catching and unique, this member of the Next Generation™ series of reblooming Hydrangeas looks simply amazing anywhere you place it. Plant one as a focal point in your partly shaded garden or place a few in containers around your patio for a display that will have the entire neighborhood talking! Just 2 to 3 feet high and 3 to 5 wide (somewhat less wide in containers), 'Pistachio' pops wherever it is planted! Zones 5-9.
Product Details
SKU | v2036 |
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Genus | Hydrangea |
Species | macrophylla |
Variety | 'Horwack' |
Plant Patent | PP#25,577 |
Product Classification | Perennials, Shrubs, Trees and Shrubs |
Habit | Compact |
USDA Zone Low | 5 |
USDA Zone High | 9 |
Sun / Shade | Part Shade |
Bloom Color | Green, Pink, Red |
Max Bloom Size | 5.00 |
Bloom Season Start | Early Summer |
Bloom Season End | Mid Fall |
Foliage Color | Medium Green |
Resistance | Heat Tolerant, Humidity Tolerant, Pest Resistant |
Special Features | Bloom First Year, Double Blooms, Easy Care Plants, Fall Color, Fast Growing, Flower, Free Bloomer, Long Bloomers |
Uses | Border, Containers, Cut Flowers, Specimen |
Zone | 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 |
Product Questions
Customer Reviews
Top customer reviews
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Amazing! 0 people found this helpfulI found this variety at a local nursery late last summer. Did not have time to get it into the ground so just planted in a larger container. It died back in the fall so brought the whole thing into the house. A couple months later it started to bud and get new growth so I placed it under a plant light in the basement by a sunny egress window. It's now the end of March and it is thriving! Can't wait for the ground to thaw so I can plant it in the ground this summer. It's obviously VERY hardy.