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    Home » Flower Growing Guides

    How To Grow Limelight Hydrangea

    Published by Pam Kessler | 704 words. · About 4 minutes to read this article. -

    How to grow and care for your Limelight Hydrangea. A beautiful deciduous shrub for your garden which is very forgiving and easy to grow.

    Normally, I would say that my favorite plant is my Black-eyed Susan vine, but lately I've been having an affair with my Limelight hydrangea.

    It's a beautiful plant!

    How to grow and care for your Limelight Hydrangea. A beautiful deciduous shrub for your garden which is very forgiving and easy to grow.

    Officially, they say the blooms are a chartreuse color, but around here they become this very pretty creamy white color with just tinge of lime green poking through.

    How to grow and care for your Limelight Hydrangea. A beautiful deciduous shrub for your garden which is very forgiving and easy to grow.

    They start blooming in late July and if you can bear to leave the yummy blooms on the plants until fall . . . BOOM . . they turn a deep pink color that looks wonderful in fall arrangements.

    Limelight hydrangea in fall - the blooms open as chartreuse in the summer and fade to a beautiful rich pink color in the fall if left on the bush.
    And they dry beautifully!

    Any questions???

    OK, you in the first row. Yes, you with the yoga pants on, eating a pint of Ben & Jerry's.

    Do Limelight hydrangeas need full sun?

    They like part-sun to full-sun. I have two of these and the one that gets more sun during the day gets twice as many blooms.

    Sun vs shade requirements for Limelight hydrangea care

    Now to be fair, when I planted them they were in equal sun vs shade positions, but the tree on the right side of the house grew so much it didn't do that Limelight any favors.

    How do I find these guys?

    Their name is Hydrangea paniculata 'Limelight' (common name Panicle hydrangea)- just check with your local nursery to see if they sell them in your area or you can buy them online at Amazon .

    How to grow and care for your Limelight Hydrangea. A beautiful deciduous shrub for your garden which is very forgiving and easy to grow.

     

    How tall do Limelight hydrangeas get?

    6-8 foot tall, so just a little shorter than Bigfoot.

    Lime green color of Limelight hydrangea (bright chartreuse to be exact)

    Will they grow where I live?

    Golly, that all depends where you live. They are hardy in zones - 3a- 9b. If you don't already know your gardening zone, you can go to the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map, input your zip code and it will tell you your zone.

    Do Limelight hydrangea bloom on old or new wood?

    Glad you asked. They bloom on new wood, which is another way of saying new growth.

    How to grow and care for your Limelight Hydrangea. A beautiful deciduous shrub for your garden which is very forgiving and easy to grow.

     

    Do you cut back Limelight hydrangeas?

    Since they bloom from new wood, any heavy pruning should be done in winter or very early spring before the new growth emerges. Otherwise you are going to drastically reduce the number of glorious blooms!

    Limelight Hydrangea spacing?

    If you are interested in growing your Limelight hydrangea as a hedge (gorgeous look by the way), you can space them 7-8 feet apart (center of plant to center of plant).

    What to plant with my Limelight hydrangea?

    Some wonderful limelight hydrangeas companion plants are:

    Hostas - hostas will look wonderful planted around your Limelight. The variegated varieties can take a little more sun that your typical shade loving variety and come in some wonderful whites and golds mixed with green.

    Coral Bells (Heuchera) - I have some plum colored coral bells planted near one of my Limelight hydrangeas and the color contrast is just beautiful.

    Ornamental Grasses -  Some of the striped varieties of ornamental grasses really play off the colors of the Limelight. One of my favorite varieties is Golden Japanese Forest Grass (Hakonechloa macra 'Aureola') which has beautiful golden foliage with thin stripes of green running through them. The gold appears almost chartreuse in shadier areas.

    Limelight hydrangea produces cone shaped flowers.

    I have four hydrangea already, do I really needs another hydrangea?

    You betcha! They are footloose and fancy free. I water them if we're having an extended drought, but generally these guys are on their own!

    And you can NEVER have enough hydrangeas in your outdoor lineup. Never. Ever. Ever.

    How to grow and care for your Limelight Hydrangea. A beautiful deciduous shrub for your garden which is very forgiving and easy to grow.

    So to recap,

    How To Grow Limelight Hydrangea:

    • Part-Sun to Full-Sun
    • Grows 6-8 foot tall with a spread of 6-8 foot wide
    • Hardy in zones 3a - 9b
    • Blooms on new wood (new growth)
    • Only prune in winter or very early spring
    • Flowers from mid-July through fall
    • Buy as many as will fit in the back seat of your car

    What plants are you crushing on this year?

    Other Posts You May Enjoy:

    How To Grow Hydrangea In Pots
    How To Dry Hydrangea The Easy Way
    Quick And Easy Hydrangea Wreath

    How to grow and care for your Limelight Hydrangea. A beautiful deciduous shrub for your garden which is very forgiving and easy to grow.



    (This post contains some affiliate links for your convenience. You can read my full disclosure policy here.)
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    Comments

    1. Jane@Cottage at the Crossroads

      July 27, 2014 at 1:44 pm

      Pam, if I can find one more vintage picnic basket, I'm going to stack them up just like yours!!! I have been intending to plant one of these hydrangea bushes. I have one that blooms dark purple, but it didn't like the cold winter that we had and has given me less blooms this year! If I plant one of these, I'm going to name it PAM!

    2. Pam Kessler

      September 10, 2013 at 2:55 pm

      @Jan - I've pruned them late in the year. Actually I normally prune off the dried and brown hydrangea blooms right before it snows and they do fine. They bloom on new wood which means new growth in the spring, so pruning shouldn't effect the blooms unless you do it too close to next year's bloom time.

    3. Jan

      September 08, 2013 at 2:26 pm

      I just got new landscaping for the front yard. The man put in 3 lime light hydrangeas in from of my pic window. They looked great for a week. The man said when the blooms get dry and brown looking cut them and new ones will come in there place. well I am afraid to do this as almost all the leaves are brown and fallen off. Is it not too late in the year to prune Lime Light?

    4. Lynn @The Vintage Nest

      August 19, 2013 at 10:50 am

      wow...thank you for posting this. I have one of these and had no idea what it was called. Thought it was some kind of snowball bush. A former owner planted it on the edge of the woods of the front yard so it gets sun and shade. Didn't bloom for a few years but once it got going it's fabulous. Creamy white blooms that turn such a pretty greenish. Love the name....Limelight. Now I know. xoxo

    5. Shabby chic Sandy

      August 10, 2013 at 3:56 am

      Okay--I so want those. You sold me.

    6. Pam @ Frippery

      August 09, 2013 at 9:40 pm

      Pam, they are my favorite too. I have 15 hydrangeas in the garden and 4 are Limelight. They are the easiest and most spectacular of all. My Annabelle's used to be the biggest but these guys have them beat. Looks beautiful!

    7. GinaE

      August 09, 2013 at 11:04 am

      I envy anyone who has these beautiful bushes. Everything burns to a crisp where I live in TX.

    8. Kathy Moreland

      August 08, 2013 at 9:31 am

      Any hydrangea! I love them all, and want some to dry for indoor arrangements. Gotta plant some!!

    9. Marissa

      August 08, 2013 at 9:18 am

      Oh how I wish we could grow hydrangeas here in South Tx. yours are gorgeous XO Marissa.

    10. Sandy

      August 08, 2013 at 8:09 am

      Pam, this is my favorite hydrangea! I have one that is 8 feet tall and it consistently performs year after year. I have fresh long lasting blooms that I use for boquests for about 2 months. I also have a endless summer that looks great this year but last year only had 2 blooms. My blushing bride had 2 blooms this year too. I found out that these grow on old wood so don't trim them in the fall.

    11. Tricia

      August 07, 2013 at 11:14 pm

      Is this the first year you've had that plant? Gosh, it's big! I've been thinking that I'd like to try try limelights too or maybe the little lime variety. Have you seen those? I just got nine hydrangea bushes though, so I'd have to put some thought into where I could plant those.

    12. Robin Johnson

      August 07, 2013 at 10:10 pm

      I'm crushing on Limelights right now too! I've had one, but planted two more this year. They are all just starting to bloom and I'm so excited. I'm a little sad that i don't have very many blooms yet. I didn't trim them back last year and I'm wondering if that is the problem. How do you maintain them?

    13. ThrifterSisters

      August 07, 2013 at 4:58 pm

      Hydrangeas are my absolute favorite flower. My Grandma Gloria had a gorgeous blue/purple Hydrangea bush on the side of her house and every time I see them, I think of her. Yours are gorgeous! Thanks for the tips:-)

      ~Erica

    14. Sweet Peas

      August 07, 2013 at 2:35 pm

      Pam your hydrangeas are so pretty but what I am loving is the vintage picnic basket stack!! I only have one so after seeing this picture I am going to hunt for more!

      Nicole

    15. Pam

      August 07, 2013 at 2:07 pm

      @Melinda - Our soil is very clay-ish. The people who lived here before we did were mulch lovers and I think that after years and years of mulch being applied and decomposing it really has improved the soil.

    16. Melinda

      August 07, 2013 at 1:15 pm

      What if anything have you done to yoursoil? Ours is very acidic.
      Nothing much grows in our soil.

      :o)

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