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how has this variety has performed in your garden.
Hardiness:
Zone 5
Bloom Time:
Mid-summer to fall
Bloom Color:
Doubled, pink or blue flowers turn to red or dark blue later in the
season
Foliage Color:
Glossy, green
Size:
3.5-5 feet tall and wide
Exposure:
Full sun to partial shade
Soil:
Well-drained soil
Pruning:
Shamrock Hydrangea forms its flower buds in later summer and then
flowers in late June. The best time to prune is it after it blooms, from
mid-July to mid-August. Cease pruning in mid-august to allow time
for the flower buds to form prior to winter.
As a young plant it
is best to prune or pinch your plant in order to build a full bodied,
well branched plant. If the plant is leggy when you purchased it,
shear the plant back hard by 1/3 to 1/2 its original size. Once it puts
on an inch or two of growth, pinch the branch tips to remove just the
growing tip. This tip controls branching. Once it is removed the
buds below it will turn into stems. Once these new branches grow an inch
or two, pinch the tip out again. You can repeat this throughout the
first growing season as you are tending your garden. Although you
will sacrifice one year of bloom, this technique results in a well
branched, full bodied plant that will have more flowers in subsequent
years. The second season in the ground, repeat the pinching practice (or
lightly shear) up until mid-August. Cease pruning and pinching to
allow the flower buds to set.
During the third and
subsequence seasons, prune or pinch as necessary after flowering and
before bud set in mid-August. Do not be afraid to prune or shear your
plant harder if you wish to maintain a shorter size.
Watering:
High moisture. Moisture is a necessity of this plant.
Wildlife:
None
Type:
Deciduous
Fertilizing:
Fertilize in early spring by applying a slow release fertilizer
specialized for trees & shrubs. Follow the label for recommended rate of
application. Flower color is affected by pH. For blue flowers, the soil
must be more acidic and for pink flowers, the soil must be more
alkaline. An easy way to induce blue flowers is to add one tablespoon of
Aluminum sulfate to a gallon of water and soak the roots in early
spring. Treat two times.
Uses:
Groupings or masses, perennial or
shrub borders, specimen, screens or hedges, mixed container, cut flowers.
Breeder:
Corinne Mallet
A cool new variety
of hydrangea in the Japanese tradition. Delicate, doubled florets are
more refined than those of the more familiar mophead hydrangeas.
Flowering begins in
July with pink or blue flowers (depending on soil pH). As the season
progresses, bloom color deepens into rich red or violet. This variety
is very floriferous and long blooming
‘Shamrock’ is
somewhat more compact than other hydrangea varieties, and may be
slightly more frost resistant.
Hydrangea fans take
note: a portion of the royalties this plant earns are used to support
the hydrangea collection of the French Hydrangea Society near Dieppe in
Upper Normandy. Who knows what exciting new varieties may come out of
this respected breeding program?
Available at better nurseries, garden centers
Sources

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