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Peegee hydrangea is a deciduous wide-spreading, rather rangy shrub or small tree with big showy pyramid-shaped clusters of white to pink flowers that literally weight down the branches. Peegee hydrangea starts branching near the ground and has a rounded shape, getting 10-25 ft (3.1-7.6 m) tall and just as wide, although many specimens stay considerably smaller. The leaves are opposite, oval, have pointed tips and toothed margins, and are 3-6 in (7.6-15.2 cm) long. The flowers are borne in erect panicles 3-10 in (7.l6-25.4 cm) tall. [A panicle is a flower cluster in which the flowers are at the ends of branched stalks that come laterally off an elongated central shoot; the flowers mature from the bottom upward. Compare to a raceme in which the flower stalks are not branched and a spike in which the flowers don't have stalks at all.] Peegee hydrangea blooms over a long season, with the flowers starting out white in mid-summer, aging to pink and finally turning rusty brown in autumn. Unlike bigleaf hydrangea (H. macrophylla), flower color does not vary with soil pH. Peegee hydrangea's dried flowers persist (although they are not at all attractive) even after the leaves have fallen. Peegee hydrangea and oakleaf hydrangea (H. quercifolia) from the southeastern U.S. are the only hydrangeas with cone-shaped flower clusters; all the others have their flowers in rounded or flat-topped clusters. Peegee hydrangea (H. paniculata 'Grandiflora') is the most common cultivar, available by mail order and from garden centers throughout the northern U.S. Its huge flower clusters start out snow white, age to pinkish purple and can be as large as 18 in (45.7 cm) long and 10 in (25.4 cm) wide at their bases. It is sometimes pruned to a single leader to form a small tree and then called "tree hydrangea." 'Unique' also has large flower clusters but starts blooming earlier in the season. 'Tardiva' is a little less coarse in the landscape with smaller flower clusters (to 6" long) that bloom later in the season, usually not until well into autumn.
Location
Culture
Peegee hydrangea is best suited to the far corners of a landscape or in mixed shrub borders where its coarse texture will not stand out. Many gardeners think peegee hydrangea is more attractive when pruned to tree form. With thoughtful pruning it can be an attractive specimen as a shrub or a tree.
Features Steve Christman 9/13/00; updated 2/12/04
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