Wednesday, July 6, 2016

New Hydrangea Arborescens Mail Orders: Invincibelle Ruby and Incrediball Blush!


Invincibelle Ruby (stock photo)

Due to my failure to find these at any physical nursery (yet), I have decided to mail-order these from Garden Crossings in Michigan. A couple of years back, well-known plantsman Tim Wood at Spring Meadow Nursery in Grand Haven MI tweaked some hydrangea arborescens into producing some stronger blooms and stems when it comes to the pink and red spectrums. These will be in within a week's time and planted, and will be getting revved up over the winter for the 2017 growing season!

Incrediball Blush (stock photo)




Review: Westmoreland County Nurseries

Today's haul (containers with hydrangeas) courtesy of Greensburg Home Depot. Sorry, local garden centers, you didn't cut the mustard!

Today I stopped out to some Westmoreland Co. garden centers and nurseries, and by the time I made my last stop at Home Depot I was never so happy to see a big box store. Kind of a waste of gas and overall disappointing. Some of these places are run down and half-overrun with weeds. It's like they don't even have a person to go around and tidy up. What gives???

Here's my summary of where I stopped:

1. Plumline Nursery (Allegheny/Westmoreland border) - 3.5/5 Stars. For 2016, this garden center and nursery was largely renovated with added parking, a new inventory layout and an entirely new checkout shanty. Their annuals were 75% off for Fourth of July week, which is a pretty good sale. Still above average prices on everything else.

2. Camp Joann Nursery (Apollo) - 2.5/5 Stars. Small selection. Somewhat expensive for product sizes. They were running a number of sales on various products, which is appropriate for this time of year.

3. Stallard Garden Center (Mamont) - 1/5 Stars. Didn't even turn in, it looked run-down from the road and I saw no selection. Old shells of hoop greenhouses could be seen in adjacent field. What gives???

4. Sieg Nature Gardens (Export) - 2/5 Stars. Nice little lot, but small selection and high prices. Sale prices on annuals didn't really make anything worth buying.

5. Country Farms (Greensburg) - 4/5 Stars. Always fairly well stocked and the staff is plentiful and helpful. Their interior retail area has an interesting old wood floor. Charming.

6. Greensburg Landscape Center - 1/5 Stars. They brag about 10,000 plants in stock, but only a few hundred generic varieties could be seen in their "nursery" area. No employees to be seen anywhere.

7. Heasley Brothers' Nursery - Google sent me to a residential address in Greensburg. Somebody needs to fix this!!!

8. Garden Envy - Yelp says this is a garden center but apparently it's a wedding planning service. Nothing but a grassy field at Google's "location".

9. Greensburg Garden Center - not a garden center, it's an events hall!!!

10. Wolfe Nursery (Hempfield) - 2.5/5 Stars. Another disheveled place, no sign to get into the "parking lot" - weeds everywhere. Nursery stock was half the quality of what it was last year. Completely unappealing!

11. King Garden Palace & Nursery - closed since 2008. I don't get what the point is in having places listed online that no longer exist. No idea.

Saturday, July 2, 2016

Hydrangea Arborescens Haas Halo Lives Up To The Hype!

Hydrangea arborescens 'Haas Halo'. Yes, this is MY plant!

In 2013-14 Plants Nouveau group helped introduce to the market a new naturally-occurring sport of hydrangea arborescens that was found in eastern PA, called 'Haas Halo'. As with most plants of this species, it grows to about five feet tall and can expand more or less infinitely via sucker shoots that appear in the soil yearly. The foliage color is the same as most plants of this species, and flower heads can be best described as a lacecap version of Proven Winners' Incrediball. More specifically, each head can get up to about the size of a dinner plate and features a small number of sterile florets around and interlacing with a large number of fertile florets. Since there are a low number of sterile florets in each flower head, the plant is very flop resistant during heavy rain storms!

Size of mature bloom. Courtesy of Plants Nouveau

Friday, July 1, 2016

New Hydrangeas Lime Lovebird, Grateful Red, Fuchsia Glow Are Solid Replacements for Merritt's Supreme, F&E Red, etc.

A "perennial challenge" for many years now has been the seemingly never-ending quest for hydrangea breeders to come up with reliable plants that display reddish or dark pink hues, and can do this on current year's growth! Starting around 2014, solutions started being introduced, but it takes another year for these to hit the market and a whole winter to get tested. And that brings us here.

Have trouble getting your Merritt's Supreme, Red Sensation, Maltisse, etc. to bloom year after year after year? Yep, thought so! Now there are actually some reasonable solutions on the market. They are (drum roll please)... Fuchsia Glow (Garden Debut), Grateful Red (McKay Nurseries), and Lime Lovebird (Ball Horticultural).

Grateful Red produces the brightest red (akin to the red Knockout Rose), with Fuchsia glow holding down a dark pink (closest to Merritt's Supreme). Both plants have averagely-green leaves. Lime Lovebird blooms a vivid hot dark pink and has somewhat dark foliage with ruddy-colored leaf nodes. Not sure which of these are the largest, but all grow to at least 3x3' in height and do well in part sun (4-5 hours direct).

All three of these entries serve as fine specimens on the (guaranteed) pink end of the hydrangea macrophylla spectrum. Pictures are as follows!
Grateful Red (stock photo).

Lime Lovebird (infant bloom stage). Yes, this is MY plant.

Fuchsia glow (infant bloom stage). Yes, this is MY plant!



Wednesday, June 29, 2016

My New Hydrangea Macrophylla: Firefly (Horcos)

Yes, this is my plant!
Please allow me to take a few moments to give an initial review of a brand new hydrangea macrophylla to hit the market this year: Firefly! (scientific cultivar name: Horcos). This is a sturdy, robust plant that's supposed to grow to about 4x4' in height. It appears to be very sun tolerant, as mine has been in-ground for a couple of months now and has shown no droop, wilting, or scorching of any kind - pretty good for a new planting!

This blooms with semi-doubled almost bicolored flowers, which start whitish in the centers with pink edges, then change to mostly a vivid pink as time passes. I do not yet know what the spent blooms will look light. The foliage is a vivid bright/deep green with red accents along the edges and along the stems.

I bought mine at Trax Farms nursery in Finleyville off PA Route 88 in a 3-gallon for close to $40. Last I checked they were low, but I believe LMS in Allison Park has some in stock.