Hydrangea 'Tiffany Pink' Large Royalty Collection
Top quality large established plants in a 7.5 litre pot, beautiful long lasting flowering period.
Top quality large established plants in a 7.5 litre pot, beautiful long lasting flowering period.
Hydrangea Macrophylla Tiffany Pink Large Plants 10-15 Flowers. 7.5 Litre pot. Tiffany Pink is another member of our 'Royalty Collection' Flowers are large and plentiful and a beautiful two tone deep pink. This is a long flowering plant that blooms from July until frosts
What to expect: Your Hydrangea can arrive at different stages of growth depending when purchased. The pictures were taken between July 2016 currently at the time of listing ( July) the plants have an actual height, excluding the pot of around 50cm, flowers are beginning to bloom, quality is exceptionally good. Flowering period is very long and can last well in late Autumn
Planting position: Best planted in a lightly shaded warm spot, never close to a tree. Tree roots are the dominant force and will deprive your hydrangea of the nutrition it needs
Suitable for container planting: Yes a great choice
Position: Full sun through to partial shade.
Soil: Happy in all soil types excluding heavy clay
Eventual Height at maturity: Approximately 80 to 100cm Flowering Period: June through to late October
Winter Hardy: Yes for the whole UK, copes well with rain, wind and moderate to Frost. Severe frosts will not be fatal it may damage the buds this will almost certainly result in smaller flowers, whilst this isnt relevant to plants that are going to live in the south it may be advisable to wrap in a winter fleece in the colder parts of the Uk.
Evergreen: No Deciduous
Pruning: Cut your Hydrangea back to a strong pair of buds in early spring after the frosts have cleared, can be cut earlier if you have planted in a pot and can bring it inside to escape the worse of the winter weather.
Hydrangea plants do not like having dry roots. The plant needs watering regularly, both in a pot and in the soil during warm periods. You should thereby try as much as possible to keep the flowers dry. If pot planted we would recommend you stand your pot on water dish and water from the base. Do not allow to dry out.
When should I prune back my Hydrangea:
We suggest waiting until Febrary/March when the frosts have gone. The dead flower heads will protect the plant over the winter months. When the frosts have finished cut it back by approximately a quarter and remove any weak or frost damaged shoots to the healthy wood.