Today we’re going back to June with Carla Zambelli Mudry, looking at some photos from hydrangea season in her garden in Malvern, Pennsylvania.
I have a deep love for hydrangeas. I rediscovered them as an adult visiting the Hamptons in New York. They are an integral part of the summer landscape up there and are very tough and indestructible plants. I love the diversity of hydrangeas available. Among my favorites are those with airy fairy lacecap flowers.
I think every garden should have hydrangeas, just like I think every garden should have roses.
This lacecap hydrangea is in full bloom (Hydrangea macrophylla or H. serrata, Zones 5–9). “Lacecap” is a term used to describe hydrangeas that have a ring of large, showy, sterile flowers around the outside of the bloom, and a cluster of smaller, fertile ones in the middle. This is the normal form for these plants in the wild, with the large, sterile flowers serving to draw pollinators in to the fertile blooms in the middle.
This lovely lacecap hydrangea is a rich shade of purple. The color of hydrangea blooms is a combination of the soil and the genetics of the individual variety. The hydrangea plant needs aluminum to produce the blue pigment. In acidic soils, aluminum is very available and is easily taken up into the plant to make rich blue colors. In more alkaline soils, aluminum is chemically bound to the soil and the plants can’t absorb it, so the flowers stay pink.
A beautiful pink lacecap form, delicate and graceful
Mophead varieties produce mostly large sterile flowers instead of just an outer ring like in the lacecap types. This means they can produce few if any seeds, but they really make an over-the-top display in the garden.
Think you don’t have room for a hydrangea? Many of the newer varieties are quite compact and will thrive in a container. Just give them a little extra protection from winter cold by moving them into a shed or garage if you live in a cold climate.
While the classic mophead and lacecap hydrangeas are native to Asia, the smooth hydrangea (Hydrangea arborescens, Zones 3–9) is native to the southeastern United States. Much more cold hardy than their Asian relatives, they’re easy to grow in nearly every garden and make big heads of white flowers.
Smooth hydrangeas generally have white flowers, but new breeding has produced pink forms, a wonderful addition to this fantastic plant.
Another great species of hydrangea native to the southeastern United States is the oakleaf hydrangea (Hydrangea quercifolia, Zones 5–9), with big, conical flower heads and beautifully bold foliage.
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