Hi velvetlace! Thanks very much! I think you're going to love your Fire Light; it's a fantastic plant. We put some helpful links in the video description regarding hydrangeas if you're looking for more information. Thanks for joining us here. Happy gardening!!
I have another amazing tip for drying Hydrangea....there is a spice in the grocery store called ALUM (used in pickling). Cut your hydrangea in garden, recut inside and dip fresh cut ends into the alum and then into the water. They will dry beautifully!!! the Alum keeps the hydrangea from closing up and thereby the flower can soak up that water while drying...I have blooms 3 years old that while fragile and still stunning....it was a PINterest tip I saw and figured it couldn't hurt to try....been drying that way since!!!!
I cut several blooms from my Vanilla Strawberry paniculata hydrangea last fall and just put them in a dry vase. They look as good as the day I cut them and it's May now.
Wonderful video! I have 3 endless summer and three bloom struck that I planted in mid June. I'm in zone 5a on the western side of Iowa. I deadheaded my spent blooms in August on all of my hydrangea and as if October 1st I had new blooms forming on my endless summer. I thought this was odd since we had a a few frosty nights, but then we had a week of 80 degree weather after the frost. I guess I get to enjoy a little blooming before the next frost 🤗
Thanks for the info. I planted a 2 gallon Firelight about this time last year. It was cool to see it lose it’s leaves, then watch new ones appear in March, followed by buds then beautiful white flowers that slowly turned pink in August. The burgundy color was short lived. They quickly turned brown. Not sure if it was a water issue. Thanks for the details on when to deadhead to capture the beautiful color. I’ll do better tracking them next year. I’d love to capture them when they are pink and white. Glorious!
Strawberry Vanilla Tree Hydrangea, Zone (7b) and I'm cluless about its care and want to get to the root of the matter. Thank you for infomative videos. 🙏🌞
Thanks for all the info, Jessica. I live in Canada and have 4 Quick Fire Hydrangeas. One year I hardly had any flowers because I trimmed them at the wrong time. This year they were magnificent. I wish I had found your channel earlier because I would have dried some properly to enjoy for longer. Luckily they weren't by my entrances though, because they were always swarmed with flies. They were not seen easily and didn't harm the plants, but if I touched the bush or standard, they all came flying out. Do you know why this is, and can you suggest what I can do if this happens next summer? Thanks again, for sharing. Lola 😊🇨🇦
Hello! I have a few of these firelight hydrangeas and the stems are not nearly as sturdy as the ones showing here. I have been fertilizing them in the spring. Do you have any advice on this? Thank you!
Hi, macrophylla also blooms on new wood, depending on the cultivar, such as Endless Summer, and they bloom through the summer. Thank you for a fun video.
Endless Summer hydrangeas don't bloom on new wood in my zone 4 garden, sadly. 😔 Our growing season is just too short. They have performed so badly for so many years, I'm moving them to a more wild part of my property where they can live out their flowerless days and replacing them with paniculata type hydrangeas that bloom on new wood. It's too bad, too, because I loved the color blue they have, and you can't find that blue (or purple) in the paniculatas. The nickname I've heard them called is Endless Bummer, lol!
Good morning Dagmara! Thank you for joining us here! The pink flowers on top of the fence are not trees, but actually petunia planters which have been mounted to the fence. Wish they were trees -- that would be amazing -- sorry to disappoint. Happy gardening!
Specifically they are Supertunia® Vista Fuchsia petunias. We planted them in 12” planters (4 plants per container) that are up on metal display stands. Check out the end of our Garden Tour Update: Top Performer for 2021: Medusa Ipomoea video for a closer look. th-cam.com/video/vyJnh2qf4Ls/w-d-xo.html
I have had the purple blue and the ones you cut at end of video....seems as though the bottom portion of each huge blue is white I guess bc they do not get sun....do you stake them to stay up so you get full color on blooms? One more question....with the endless summer ( we are zone 7 in Delaware) when is best time to transplant as it is getting too big for spot they are in now....any advise would be greatly appreciated! Thank you for sharing 😊k
The best time to transplant Endless Summer (a hydrangea macrophylla) is when it is dormant, which is late fall or early spring (my preference) before the leaves have emerged.
Thank you so much for the pruning info. I planted nine limelights along my driveway this year and have been battling the voracious deer all summer. Right now the poor plants have no leaves on them at all. I am in zone 6 in western NC. Do you think there is much hope for their survival through the winter? Is there something I should do to help them along? Repels All which is supposed to be good for two months barely lasts two weeks, the hostas and cone flowers are also gone.
Oh no! Hydrangeas, especially the panicle types, are quite resilient. Don’t give up on them yet, especially if you still have green wood in the stems. At this point, there is not much you can do for them; wait for spring and give them a light trim to even out the shape. There are a couple of options for deterring deer. (1) Planting deer resistant plants, which might mean giving up a few of your favorites. (2) If you love hydrangea, try planting them close to the house or planting a dwarf cultivar in a patio container. Deer tend to avoid coming right up to the house. (3) Deer repellants, which work to varying degrees. (4) Install a deer fence.
Hi Marilyn! Check out the links in the description too -- there is very helpful information explaining the differences between the various species of hydrangeas. Thanks again!
Thanks YoderHome! The color is so striking and it makes such a great dried arrangement too. Lots of fun! Thanks for joining us here! Have a nice weekend!
I have a Hydrangea that is called Forever&Ever Fantasia Hydrangea does it bloom on New wood or Old wood? I have had it for three years and it hasn’t bloom since I planted it.
Hi Jessica. Any advice on what kind of soil should I use. I tried what the Armstrong staff told me to use and the plant died. I tried different colors with no luck. I love hydrangeas but I don't know what else to do. Advice please.
Hydrangeas prefer moist, but well-drained soil. Avoid planting them in an area that stays constantly wet (so they Hydrangeas prefer moist, but well-drained soil. Avoid planting them in an area that stays constantly wet (so they don’t develop root rot). However, hydrangeas need constant moisture for proper establishment. Consider adding mulch to help with moisture retention. In general, panicle-type hydrangeas are the most forgiving of all hydrangeas and a great plant to start with. Some of our most popular varieties are Limelight, Little Lime, and Fire Light (shown in the video). Here are a couple of good resources from Proven Winners. www.provenwinners.com/Hydrangeas-Demystified www.provenwinners.com/panicle-hydrangeas
I love hydrangeas. I live in zone 7A where the summers are hot. My mini mauvettes struggled. They’re still alive but I couldn’t give them enough shade or water. Which paniculatas do well in full sun?
Hi Samara, Most people think of hydrangeas as shade plants, but they look and flower best with at least four hours of sun, ideally in the morning. Panicle hydrangeas are the most sun tolerant, and can take full sun in northern climates. Here's a link to a great resource Hydrangeas Demystified that can provide some more information: www.provenwinners.com/sites/provenwinners.com/files/pdf/hydrangeas_demystified_2015.pdf
Hiya Zee! Thanks for joining us! Parts of NY are zone 5 -- check out this site -- enter your zip code and it will provide your zone info. planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/ Happy gardening!
Mornin' Missybitsy14! We planted the Fire Light Hydrangeas about 4 years ago from a 3 gallon container. They are roughly 5 feet tall at this point and will grow to 6 to 8 feet tall at maturity. Thanks for joining us here!
Hi Sunshine! These hydrangeas were planted about 3 years ago from a 3-gallon, so they are a relatively fast grower (for a hydrangea). Thank you for watching and for your comment!
I've been daydreaming of having a paniculata variety here in North Florida zone 8b/9a (depending on the year) is it a fools hope or do you think it could work here?
What a great teacher you are dear...I just planted a Fire Light...You got me really excited for it to bloom and to dry them...❤️
Hi velvetlace! Thanks very much! I think you're going to love your Fire Light; it's a fantastic plant. We put some helpful links in the video description regarding hydrangeas if you're looking for more information. Thanks for joining us here. Happy gardening!!
I simply love this TH-cam channel and the team is a joy to watch especially Jessica!! I am sure HER garden is beautiful.
Thanks Posti4! We're really happy to hear you're enjoying our channel! Thank you for joining us here!
Yes!!! Love this channel!!!!
Mornin' Amanda! Thanks for joining us here!!
I have another amazing tip for drying Hydrangea....there is a spice in the grocery store called ALUM (used in pickling). Cut your hydrangea in garden, recut inside and dip fresh cut ends into the alum and then into the water. They will dry beautifully!!! the Alum keeps the hydrangea from closing up and thereby the flower can soak up that water while drying...I have blooms 3 years old that while fragile and still stunning....it was a PINterest tip I saw and figured it couldn't hurt to try....been drying that way since!!!!
Excellent tip! Thanks for sharing.
I cut several blooms from my Vanilla Strawberry paniculata hydrangea last fall and just put them in a dry vase. They look as good as the day I cut them and it's May now.
I can’t wait until mine get that size. Those cones are huge.
Aren't they spectacular?!? Thanks R Darrett!
Wonderful video! I have 3 endless summer and three bloom struck that I planted in mid June. I'm in zone 5a on the western side of Iowa. I deadheaded my spent blooms in August on all of my hydrangea and as if October 1st I had new blooms forming on my endless summer. I thought this was odd since we had a a few frosty nights, but then we had a week of 80 degree weather after the frost. I guess I get to enjoy a little blooming before the next frost 🤗
Thanks for the info. I planted a 2 gallon Firelight about this time last year. It was cool to see it lose it’s leaves, then watch new ones appear in March, followed by buds then beautiful white flowers that slowly turned pink in August. The burgundy color was short lived. They quickly turned brown. Not sure if it was a water issue. Thanks for the details on when to deadhead to capture the beautiful color. I’ll do better tracking them next year.
I’d love to capture them when they are pink and white. Glorious!
You're very welcome and happy gardening!
Strawberry Vanilla Tree Hydrangea, Zone (7b) and I'm cluless about its care and want to get to the root of the matter. Thank you for infomative videos. 🙏🌞
Hi Jessica, when cutting the flowers during the season for arrangements, if I cut too long a stem, am I sacrificing more blooms in that same stem?
What a beautiful Hydranges....I love it....
Thank you for sharing and happy weekend to you....
You're very welcome Zaleha!
Thanks for all the info, Jessica. I live in Canada and have 4 Quick Fire Hydrangeas. One year I hardly had any flowers because I trimmed them at the wrong time. This year they were magnificent. I wish I had found your channel earlier because I would have dried some properly to enjoy for longer.
Luckily they weren't by my entrances though, because they were always swarmed with flies. They were not seen easily and didn't harm the plants, but if I touched the bush or standard, they all came flying out. Do you know why this is, and can you suggest what I can do if this happens next summer?
Thanks again, for sharing. Lola 😊🇨🇦
Hydrangea heaven. Those hydrangeas look amazing. Thanks Jess, for the information.😊😊
Evenin' Derron! Getting cold up there? Have a great weekend!
Pleasant View Gardens Starting to get cold. Same to you.😊
what are the 4 bright link fuchsia trees in the background? they are also absolutely beautiful.
Hello! I have a few of these firelight hydrangeas and the stems are not nearly as sturdy as the ones showing here. I have been fertilizing them in the spring. Do you have any advice on this? Thank you!
Thanks Jessica. Great video!
Thanks JS!
Hi there. No one talks about fertilizing care, when & which ones which is just as important.
Subscribed. Thank you for a very informative video!
Thanks for the sub! Thanks for joining us here!
Hi, macrophylla also blooms on new wood, depending on the cultivar, such as Endless Summer, and they bloom through the summer. Thank you for a fun video.
Endless Summer hydrangeas don't bloom on new wood in my zone 4 garden, sadly. 😔 Our growing season is just too short. They have performed so badly for so many years, I'm moving them to a more wild part of my property where they can live out their flowerless days and replacing them with paniculata type hydrangeas that bloom on new wood. It's too bad, too, because I loved the color blue they have, and you can't find that blue (or purple) in the paniculatas. The nickname I've heard them called is Endless Bummer, lol!
Subscribed thank you for clear concise information - I have lots of hydrangeas so it really has helped me.
Very glad to hear the video helped Marie!
Love those Firelight Hydrangea, nice editing and camera work!
Thanks again!!
Hello from Poland :) (zone 6a)
Those trees behind you (behind the fence)- what are they?
I'll be very gratefull for an answer.
Good morning Dagmara! Thank you for joining us here! The pink flowers on top of the fence are not trees, but actually petunia planters which have been mounted to the fence. Wish they were trees -- that would be amazing -- sorry to disappoint. Happy gardening!
Question...what are the red cloud pruned trees at your fence line? I love those.
Those are actually planters of petunias mounted to the fence. We refer to them as 'lollipops'. It would be amazing if those were trees!
Specifically they are Supertunia® Vista Fuchsia petunias. We planted them in 12” planters (4 plants per container) that are up on metal display stands. Check out the end of our Garden Tour Update: Top Performer for 2021: Medusa Ipomoea video for a closer look. th-cam.com/video/vyJnh2qf4Ls/w-d-xo.html
Beautiful! May I ask what to do with the endless summer
If my bushes over 6 feet tall how far back can I cut it? Michigan Cheryl
I have had the purple blue and the ones you cut at end of video....seems as though the bottom portion of each huge blue is white I guess bc they do not get sun....do you stake them to stay up so you get full color on blooms? One more question....with the endless summer ( we are zone 7 in Delaware) when is best time to transplant as it is getting too big for spot they are in now....any advise would be greatly appreciated! Thank you for sharing 😊k
The best time to transplant Endless Summer (a hydrangea macrophylla) is when it is dormant, which is late fall or early spring (my preference) before the leaves have emerged.
Thank you so much for the pruning info. I planted nine limelights along my driveway this year and have been battling the voracious deer all summer. Right now the poor plants have no leaves on them at all. I am in zone 6 in western NC. Do you think there is much hope for their survival through the winter? Is there something I should do to help them along? Repels All which is supposed to be good for two months barely lasts two weeks, the hostas and cone flowers are also gone.
Oh no! Hydrangeas, especially the panicle types, are quite resilient. Don’t give up on them yet, especially if you still have green wood in the stems. At this point, there is not much you can do for them; wait for spring and give them a light trim to even out the shape.
There are a couple of options for deterring deer. (1) Planting deer resistant plants, which might mean giving up a few of your favorites. (2) If you love hydrangea, try planting them close to the house or planting a dwarf cultivar in a patio container. Deer tend to avoid coming right up to the house. (3) Deer repellants, which work to varying degrees. (4) Install a deer fence.
Are there a dwarf version of this?
I love hydrangeas! My problem is when to prune Jessica gour explaining was helpful!
Hi Marilyn! Check out the links in the description too -- there is very helpful information explaining the differences between the various species of hydrangeas. Thanks again!
Beautiful bouquet 🤩😍🤩😍
Thanks YoderHome! The color is so striking and it makes such a great dried arrangement too. Lots of fun! Thanks for joining us here! Have a nice weekend!
Very helpful. Thanks
Good learning
I have a Hydrangea that is called Forever&Ever Fantasia Hydrangea does it bloom on New wood or Old wood? I have had it for three years and it hasn’t bloom since I planted it.
Should I prune my aha tuff stuff hydrangea and when?
Hi Jessica. Any advice on what kind of soil should I use. I tried what the Armstrong staff told me to use and the plant died. I tried different colors with no luck. I love hydrangeas but I don't know what else to do. Advice please.
Hydrangeas prefer moist, but well-drained soil. Avoid planting them in an area that stays constantly wet (so they Hydrangeas prefer moist, but well-drained soil. Avoid planting them in an area that stays constantly wet (so they don’t develop root rot). However, hydrangeas need constant moisture for proper establishment. Consider adding mulch to help with moisture retention. In general, panicle-type hydrangeas are the most forgiving of all hydrangeas and a great plant to start with. Some of our most popular varieties are Limelight, Little Lime, and Fire Light (shown in the video).
Here are a couple of good resources from Proven Winners.
www.provenwinners.com/Hydrangeas-Demystified
www.provenwinners.com/panicle-hydrangeas
I love hydrangeas. I live in zone 7A where the summers are hot. My mini mauvettes struggled. They’re still alive but I couldn’t give them enough shade or water. Which paniculatas do well in full sun?
Hi Samara, Most people think of hydrangeas as shade plants, but they look and flower best with at least four hours
of sun, ideally in the morning. Panicle hydrangeas are the most sun tolerant, and can take full sun in northern climates. Here's a link to a great resource Hydrangeas Demystified that can provide some more information: www.provenwinners.com/sites/provenwinners.com/files/pdf/hydrangeas_demystified_2015.pdf
Great video, thanks!!
Thanks for joining us here! Happy gardening Dog Mom!
How can I get one of these Firelight hydrangeas?
I love this channel! Beautiful! Is NY zone 5?
Hiya Zee! Thanks for joining us! Parts of NY are zone 5 -- check out this site -- enter your zip code and it will provide your zone info. planthardiness.ars.usda.gov/PHZMWeb/
Happy gardening!
So BEAUIFUL 💕
Thanks Meme Kelly! Glad you joined us here. :)
You are awesome
Hi hydrangea is fantastic and I have hydrangea magical vesuvio 😍❤❤
Thanks for joining us!
How big is this hydrangea and how old is it? Thank you!
Mornin' Missybitsy14! We planted the Fire Light Hydrangeas about 4 years ago from a 3 gallon container. They are roughly 5 feet tall at this point and will grow to 6 to 8 feet tall at maturity. Thanks for joining us here!
How fast do they grow?
Hi Sunshine! These hydrangeas were planted about 3 years ago from a 3-gallon, so they are a relatively fast grower (for a hydrangea). Thank you for watching and for your comment!
I've been daydreaming of having a paniculata variety here in North Florida zone 8b/9a (depending on the year) is it a fools hope or do you think it could work here?
There are macrophylla varieties in my neighborhood but they only looked good in April and looked burned the rest of the Summer.
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