Hydrangea Let’s Dance Can Do!®

Hydrangea  hy-DRAYN-juh

Proven Winners Let’s Dance Can Do®: (Reblooming Hydrangea serrata) There’s no dancing around the fact that Hydrangea Let’s Dance Can Do® will soon be a favorite lace-cap Hydrangea among gardeners. When you look at this Hydrangea, you see the magnificent blooms, large lace cap flower heads that are loaded with large bubblegum pink (or lavender-blue) florets that create a full flower look. Let’s Dance Can Do® is a giver with its unique ability to line the stems from top to bottom with buds that in turn will create a covering of flowers. The fastest reblooming hydrangea that we offer, Let’s Dance Can Do® will start off early and rebloom again mid-summer giving you color through the season. We recommend planting in full sun to part shade locations with moderate to moist soil conditions. Let’s Dance Can Do® is a great specimen plant as well as used for borders and in planters. We do not recommend trimming your reblooming hydrangea as it will affect the blooms. If you feel you need to trim it back, we recommend doing so in the fall which will sacrifice your first round of blooms.

Zone 5

Full to Part Sun

Height: 3-4’/Spread: 3′

Summer 

Size Available: 3 Gallon

Hydrangea Let’s Dance Can Do!®

Description

Hydrangea  hy-DRAYN-juh

Hydrangeas are a genus of over 75 species and 600 named cultivars that are native to a wide range of regions and countries including Japan, Asia, Indonesia, Himalayan mountains and the Americas. Hydrangeas can grow as climbing vines and trees but are most commonly grown as a shrub. The beautiful flowers produced by this plant is what makes these so popular. Most put on a showy display from early spring all the way into fall. The large flowers come in a variety of shapes, colors and sizes.

Many people remember hydrangea shrubs from their childhood. Today we are falling in love with them all over again and the good news is that we can now grow many hydrangea varieties our grandmothers never even dreamed of. Some newer hydrangeas grow in colder climates, some are so small they will fit into the perennial border and others have amazingly large blooms and deep colors.