- Home
- Garden Plants
- Plant species
- Hydrangea
- Bigleaf hydrangea Hydrangea macrophylla Purple - Hardy plant
{{discount}}% off
Months of pleasure
As the name suggests: enjoy for 'Forever & Ever'! The hydrangea (Hydrangea macrophylla) flowers for months. So, you can enjoy a purple garden for months. The flowers bloom from summer to autumn.
Pruning is not necessary, unless the bush becomes too large. Plant the hydrangea in partial shade. The soil should be kept damp. Give it extra water during dry periods.
Pruning is not necessary, unless the bush becomes too large. Plant the hydrangea in partial shade. The soil should be kept damp. Give it extra water during dry periods.
Bigleaf hydrangea Hydrangea macrophylla Purple - Hardy plant
Hydrangea macrophylla
Regular price
£41.99
Sale price
£41.99
Regular price
£41.99
Unit price
/
per
Fast delivery, within 5 working days
Free afterpayment with Klarna
Sustainably packed with recycled packaging material
Fresh from the nursery
Largest product range of organic plants
Specifications
Purple
Supplied as container plant
Not edible
Flowering June - October
Growing height 100 - 150 cm
6 months growth and flowering guarantee
Hardy plant
Deciduous
Location: Half shadow
Location: Shadow
Planting distance 100 - 150 cm
Planting
What do I need?
• Watering can
• Plant food
• Cow fertiliser
These beautiful hydrangeas are perfect for every garden. The large flowers look wonderful in groups or in borders. For example, you can fill in a flower bed bordered by boxwoods with hydrangeas. They also look great in a group for a border or simply with other bigleaf hydrangeas! Common Hydrangeas in the garden
• Watering can
• Plant food
• Cow fertiliser
These beautiful hydrangeas are perfect for every garden. The large flowers look wonderful in groups or in borders. For example, you can fill in a flower bed bordered by boxwoods with hydrangeas. They also look great in a group for a border or simply with other bigleaf hydrangeas! Common Hydrangeas in the garden
Care
What do I need?
• Bucket
• Trowel
• Garden peat
Hydrangea macrophylla blooms on multi-year branches. Pruning is actually not necessary. If you really have to prune it, then do it straight after it has bloomed. This enables new branches to form in the same season, which will bloom the next year. You can give the shrub a fresh look by cutting away the oldest branches every two or three years. Remove dead branches completely. Flowers that have finished blooming can be carefully clipped in the winter, but always leave the topmost bud on the branch. Bigleaf hydrangea are very winter-hardy!
During dry periods, give hydrangeas extra water, because the shrub hates dry soil. Every winter or early spring, add a layer of compost mulch and garden fertiliser. The latest bigleaf hydrangeas (Hydrangea macrophylla) bloom on old and new growth. After pruning during the winter months, these plants produce new branches that will bloom within the same year. Pruning is actually not necessary, but desirable, if you prefer a low shrub. If you still have to prune, then this should be done immediately after the plant blooms. This allows for new branches to grow during the same season, which means new flowers for that year as well, but only if you are not too late.
You can freshen up the plant by cutting away the oldest part of the branches for two or three years in a row. Remove dead branches completely. You can clip wilted flowers carefully during the winter, but always leave the uppermost bud on the branch alone. For bigleaf hydrangeas, winter is not a problem!
• Bucket
• Trowel
• Garden peat
Hydrangea macrophylla blooms on multi-year branches. Pruning is actually not necessary. If you really have to prune it, then do it straight after it has bloomed. This enables new branches to form in the same season, which will bloom the next year. You can give the shrub a fresh look by cutting away the oldest branches every two or three years. Remove dead branches completely. Flowers that have finished blooming can be carefully clipped in the winter, but always leave the topmost bud on the branch. Bigleaf hydrangea are very winter-hardy!
During dry periods, give hydrangeas extra water, because the shrub hates dry soil. Every winter or early spring, add a layer of compost mulch and garden fertiliser. The latest bigleaf hydrangeas (Hydrangea macrophylla) bloom on old and new growth. After pruning during the winter months, these plants produce new branches that will bloom within the same year. Pruning is actually not necessary, but desirable, if you prefer a low shrub. If you still have to prune, then this should be done immediately after the plant blooms. This allows for new branches to grow during the same season, which means new flowers for that year as well, but only if you are not too late.
You can freshen up the plant by cutting away the oldest part of the branches for two or three years in a row. Remove dead branches completely. You can clip wilted flowers carefully during the winter, but always leave the uppermost bud on the branch alone. For bigleaf hydrangeas, winter is not a problem!
Extra
The ball-shaped flower heads start off a greenish colour, gradually turning to its own colour, then turning back to green at the end of summer. The flowers stay on the plant for months. They still look lovely in the winter, especially when covered with a layer of frost or snow.
Hydrangea macrophylla is also known as the ‘common hydrangea’. In the old species the flower colour is determined by the pH levels in the soil. Among the newest species there are now types where this principle no longer applies.
In autumn the dead flower clusters can be dried and are great to use in a flower arrangement or autumn wreath to hang on your front door!
Hydrangea macrophylla is also known as the ‘common hydrangea’. In the old species the flower colour is determined by the pH levels in the soil. Among the newest species there are now types where this principle no longer applies.
In autumn the dead flower clusters can be dried and are great to use in a flower arrangement or autumn wreath to hang on your front door!
Description
Months of pleasure
As the name suggests: enjoy for 'Forever & Ever'! The hydrangea (Hydrangea macrophylla) flowers for months. So, you can enjoy a purple garden for months. The flowers bloom from summer to autumn.
Pruning is not necessary, unless the bush becomes too large. Plant the hydrangea in partial shade. The soil should be kept damp. Give it extra water during dry periods.
Pruning is not necessary, unless the bush becomes too large. Plant the hydrangea in partial shade. The soil should be kept damp. Give it extra water during dry periods.
Often bought together
Others also viewed
Your plant in house, quick and easy
Growing happiness with the most beautiful indoor and outdoor plants
Simply choose your plant
Sustainably packaged with the greatest of care
Quickly delivered to your door fresh from the nursery
100% growth and flowering guarantee