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THE LATEST NEWS Festival Exibitors All of the free events will be in Downtown Douglasville between O'Neal Plaza and The Old Douglas County Courthouse. |
About Penny Mac HydrangeasThe University of Georgia College Growing Bigleaf Hydrangea Gary L. Wade, Extension Horticulturist Bigleaf hydrangea, Hydrangea macrophylla, also called French, Japanese or Snowball hydrangea, is both a florist plant and landscape plant in Georgia. Often purchased as a gift plant from florists, bigleaf hydrangea can be transplanted to the landscape for repeat blooms each year. Homeowners delight in changing the flower color from pink to blue or from blue to pink by adjusting the pH of their soil. Location Bigleaf hydrangea can easily be grown in containers and is an excellent patio plant. Another advantage of growing the plant in a container is that it can be moved indoors on a cold night. Planting Don't fertilize until the plant is established (4 to 8 weeks after transplanting). The majority of Georgia soils are acidic, so initial flower color will likely be blue. Make certain the top of the root ball is level with the soil surface, and water thoroughly immediately after transplanting. Apply three to five inches of an organic mulch, like pinestraw, pine bark or fall leaves to the soil surface to conserve moisture and control weeds. Fertilization and Watering Bigleaf hydrangea is a water-demanding plant for the moderate water-use zones of the landscape. Water whenever the plant begins to wilt in the absence of rainfall. The avoidance of plant stress is particularly important during the spring months when the flower heads are forming. Flower Color The soil pH indirectly affects the color by affecting the availability of aluminum in the soil. When the soil is acid, aluminum is generally more available to the roots. When the soil is alkaline, the availability of aluminum is decreased and the flowers are more pink. To gradually change flower color from pink to blue, broadcast 1/2 cup of wettable sulfur per 10 square feet and water it in. To make the flowers pink, broadcast one cup of dolomitic lime per 10 square feet and water it into the soil. It may take a year to see a noticeable change in flower color from this treatment. Another, quicker way to achieve a change in flower color is through liquid soil drenches. To make the flowers blue, or perhaps more blue during the growing season, dissolve one tablespoon of alum (aluminum sulfate) in a gallon of water and drench the soil around the plant in March, April and May. To make the flowers pink, dissolve one tablespoon of hydrated lime in a gallon of water and drench the soil around the plant in March, April and May. Avoid getting the solution on the leaves because foliar damage may result. Failure to Flower Bigleaf hydrangea forms its flower buds in late summer for the following year, so pruning in late summer, fall and winter will remove potential flowers. Pruning Propagation Old established hydrangeas may also be divided in the early spring, by using a shovel to divide the clump. Several plants can be obtained from a well-established clump. Fact Sheet H-92-011 An Equal Opportunity Employer/Affirmative Action Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work, Acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, The University of Georgia College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and the U.S. Department of Agriculture cooperating. Gale A. Buchanan, Dean and Director
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