Baltimore Sun Sunday

LET’S DANCE!

Hydrangea varieties perform well, add long-lasting bursts of color in garden

- By Norman Winter

Electric blue and neon purple in The Garden Guy’s hydrangeas made 2019 an unforgetta­ble year in the garden. These colors came courtesy of Let’s Dance Rave hydrangeas from Proven Winners.

We’ve all seen those photos in catalogs and brochures making us wonder if those flowers really will look like that for me, and I can say, yes, they did.

This was the Year of the Hydrangea at The Garden Guy’s house. I planted 25 of them, best I can count, representi­ng three species and seven varieties. They all performed very well, but I want to tout three in particular.

Let’s Dance Rave literally stole the show in the garden, which is hard to do when companion plants were Compact Electric Orange SunPatiens. You can immediatel­y gather that this garden was a little on the gaudy side and perhaps perfect for a garden party dance.

Let’s Dance Rave will get 36 inches tall and wide, and it is a rebloomer. I suspect it may get a little taller in the deep South. It is recommende­d for zones 5-9, and as with other Hydrangea macrophyll­a varieties, the color is really dependent on soil pH. Acidic soil gives intense blues and purple, while alkaline-rich soil will yield vibrant pink shades.

At the Coastal Georgia Botanical Gardens, I had fallen for the Big Daddy hydrangea that is part of the Southern Living Plant Collection. The obvious question is would it perform similarly at my home in west Georgia?

Yes, Big Daddy looks happy at The Garden Guy’s house, but the shocker to me was how much reblooming I got. Now, in November, my blooms are aging into a beautiful kaleidosco­pe of purples.

Big Daddy is just that: big flowers 10 to 14 inches wide, big plant 5 to 6 feet tall and wide. Like Let’s Dance Rave, color is dependent on soil pH. At my house, the new blooms are lighter blue, and this shift in color, I suspect, is coming with age and the cooler 45-degree nights we’ve been experienci­ng. Big Daddy is recommende­d for zones 6-9 and, like Let’s Dance Rave, will thrive in part sun, morning sun and afternoon shade, or high-filtered light.

My last shoutout goes to Chantilly Lace. This is a selection of Hydrangea paniculata that differs from a lot of other varieties of this species in that it has the large sterile flowers and small fertile flowers. In Savannah, it was a pollinator magnet, but it would it work in west Georgia as well. The answer is yes, swallowtai­ls, hairstreak­s and bees.

If you want glorious white hydrangea blooms in mid- to late summer with the accompanim­ent of pollinator­s, then this is the one for you. It is recommende­d for zones 3-8, and based on our plants in

Savannah, zone 9 should work too. It is large, reaching 5 feet tall and wide. It blooms on current seasons growth, so cutting back will be part of your regimen. This hydrangea can go in full sun to part shade.

The Garden Guy hopes you’ll take advantage of this time of the year to stroll the landscape and see where the addition of a few hydrangeas might dazzle with color and butterflie­s. You may very well find yourself shouting “Let’s dance!” and “Who’s your daddy?”

 ?? NORMAN WINTER PHOTOS ?? Big Daddy hydrangea is part of the Southern Living Plant Collection and produces enormous flowers on plants that will reach 5 to 6 feet tall and wide.
NORMAN WINTER PHOTOS Big Daddy hydrangea is part of the Southern Living Plant Collection and produces enormous flowers on plants that will reach 5 to 6 feet tall and wide.
 ??  ?? Chantilly Lace produces both sterile and fertile flowers that attract pollinator­s, including this Eastern Tiger Swallowtai­l.
Chantilly Lace produces both sterile and fertile flowers that attract pollinator­s, including this Eastern Tiger Swallowtai­l.
 ??  ?? Let’s Dance Rave hydrangea from Proven Winners produces intensely colored blooms.
Let’s Dance Rave hydrangea from Proven Winners produces intensely colored blooms.

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