A Note From Allan

Welcome to my blog. Gardeners love to share plants and experiences. Please join me as I write about gardening and design, some of the gardening books I've reviewed, and tips collected over time.

The Garden Guru designs and plants flower gardens in Montreal, Canada, [USDA Zone 4 or CNDN Zone 5] lectures on design, and offers a garden coach service. An occasional emailed question is welcome and answered free of charge.

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Entries in Annabelle Hydrangea (2)

Monday
Oct192009

A Pink Hydrangea To Fight Breast Cancer

Do you like pink flowers? Do you like Annabelle Hydrangeas? Have you been dreaming about a pink Annabelle Hydrangea? If you answered yes to these questions, you will be “swinging from the rafters” next spring when a pink Annabelle-type hydrangea will hit the market. Hydrangea arborescens “INVINCIBELLE Spirit” will be available at better garden centers under the “Proven Winners, Color Choice” label.

Tim Woods is the Sherlock Holmes of new plants. He travels the world sniffing out new varieties that are under development or almost ready for market. According to Tim, this mop-head hydrangea, developed in the USA, will bloom pink without the need for soil amendments. Regardless of the pH of your soil, regardless of the kind of your soil, this hydrangea will bloom pink. Period! The flowers will open in a dark hot pink and mature to a clear rich pink.

Even better news is the prolific blooming that this flowering shrub provides. A single plant can produce about 100 flower heads over the course of the summer and will continue to bloom until the frost. Expect each head to measure 6 to 8 inches in diameter and to provide durable flowers for both fresh and dry arrangements. Stems that die back in winter or are trimmed to the ground are certain to bloom each season because flowers are produced on new wood.

This shrub is hardy and easy to grow in zones 3 to 9, in sun or part shade, and will reach a height and width of 2 or 3 feet. Because pink is the color identified with the battle to find a cure for breast cancer, Proven Winners will be donating $1.00 from each purchase of this plant to the “Breast Cancer Research Foundation.

 

Monday
Mar162009

Hydrangea Cousins Annabelle and Incrediball

This great shot of Annabelle is courtesy of the Extension Dept. of the University of Minnesota. Click on the image to learn more. Hydrangea Annabelle is the flowering shrub we gardeners dream about. It is brutally hardy, blooms reliably year after year, and just like a perennial, it increases in lushness and size with each season. Unlike a perennial, it does not need dividing to maintain its vigor. Just plant it and forget it. This shrub isn’t very fussy about soil and will tolerate heavy shade or full sun. At the end of the season, cut it down to the ground and it will rebound the next spring. Need some winter interest? Allow the dead mop heads to remain in the garden to be harvested in the spring. Want some giant dried flowers for indoors? Snip and dry Hydrangea blooms during the growing season when they turn from lime to white and then green. Grown in full shade, Annabelle mop heads will bloom upright. In part shade or sun, the flower heads will arc over trying to follow sunlight. The shrub remains gracefull regardless of how its flowers grow. However, in a tightly managed perennial border, the gardener may choose to restrain arcing blooms by staking the shrub with strong supports.

. "Incrediball" is a patented trade mark of Proven Winners.

Recently, the adventurous people at Proven Winners introduced an improved version of Annabelle which they named "Incrediball" or Hydrangea Abetwo.This cultivar has beefy stems and massive blooms that do not flop over even in heavy rainfall. Each bloom holds four times the number of flowers as Annabelle does and like its cousin, it will grow in sun to part shade. Both Annabelle and Incrediball are hardy in zones 3 to 9 and will grow 4 to 5 feet tall and 3 to 5 feet wide. Blooms begin in mid summer and continue until fall.