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Product Details
Publisher: Firefly Books
Release date: March 20, 2007
Language: English
Product Dimensions: 10.1 inches x 8.1 inches x 0.5 inches; 1.3 pounds
Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
Number of Pages: 144 pages ...
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Product Description
Review
Generous use of colour photos ... Detailed information on such key topics as the flower colour of big-leaf hydrangeas. (Helen Chesnut The Times-Colonist (Victoria) 200705)
Church sings [hydrangeas'] praises in this very complete guide to the genus.... gorgeous full color photographs.... informative. (National Garden Clubs, Inc. www.gardenclub.org 200609)
This book is well-written, a real pleasure to read and chock-full of information. (Ian Munk Sudbury Star 20070630)
An outstanding, practical book for gardeners. (Grand Magazine (Waterloo) 20071006)
I became caught up in the [book's] celebratory nature... [the author] emphasizes the many charms and virtues of the hydrangea. (Helen Chesnut Times-Colonist (Victoria, BC) 20070823)
[Church's] love affair with hydrangeas makes reading this book a joy no matter where you garden. (Marianne Binetti Seattle-Post Intelligencer 20070729)
A comprehensive guide that makes easy work of selecting the right hydrangeas for your garden. (Jessica Damiano Newsday 20071125)
Will charm every hydrangea lover ... easy to read ... vibrant and fascinating. (Brenda Ruzycki Edmonton Sun 200801)
Anyone who ends up growing some of these stunning beauties will be eternally grateful for this book. (Deborah Donovan Arlington Heights Daily Herald (IL) 2008)
Comprehensive ... shows hydrangeas can be everything from formal shrubs in a courtyard to visually stunning in a border. (Small Gardens 20071218)
Church's enthusiasm, expertise, and straightforward writing make this beautiful book filled with color photographs a fine acquisition. (Julienne L. Wood American Reference Books Annual 2008 )
The 180 photos of lush flowering growth will make a Toronto gardener groan with envy. (Mary Fran McQuade Beach Metro Community News )
I treasure Complete Hydrangeas because of my own love for these blowsy beauties. (Mary Fran McQuade Vaughan Today )
Product Description
"Hydrangeas have so many winning attributes, it's hard to imagine an easier group of plants to grow, or any other flowering shrubs capable of providing vibrant color for so long a season"
-from the Introduction
The large number of hydrangea cultivars developed in recent years has done much to increase their popularity across North America. Gardeners in colder regions, who could not grow these brilliant bloomers, now have many choices available. Today there are new super-hardy, dwarf and compact varieties; new colors; and new forms of these satisfying plants.
Glyn Church celebrates these developments in this comprehensive guide. Illustrated with lush color photographs on every page, Complete Hydrangeas features:
More than 230 recommended clones, cultivars and related plants
The latest developments in hybridization
Planting, pruning, pests and propagation
Choosing the best plant for the location
Special advice on growing red, pink and blue blooms
Using hydrangeas in garden design
Companion plantings
Growing in containers
Caring for cut blooms, and enjoying hydrangeas in the home.
The author's advice, guidance and enthusiasm will have readers enjoying these show-stopping blooms in their own gardens.About the Author
Glyn Church studied at Pershore College of Horticulture and the famous Chelsea Physic Garden in London. He now operates Woodleigh Nursery in New Zealand, where he grows an extensive range of hydrangeas.Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Introduction
Hydrangeas are back in fashion after a few decades of being ignored. I find it hard to fathom why their popularity ever waned when they have so many wonderful qualities. Hydrangeas can be everything from formal shrubs in a courtyard to the visual highlight of a woodland garden. If you only have a paved area, or perhaps no garden at all, you can still enjoy hydrangeas in containers, maybe as window box subjects in an apartment, as a flowering potted plant on your dining table, or in vases around your living areas. No other plant is so diverse, so resilient or gives such pleasure for so long.
Over the years hydrangeas have won me over completely. From initially thinking of these plants as simply a fill-in shrub for summer color, I now see hidden depths and qualities in every one. This has driven me to some lengths to acquire new hydrangeas; everything from importing new varieties to extend the range available, to trekking through remote regions and abandoned homesteads looking for old faithfuls that have survived the centuries. The old house may fall down and disintegrate, but next to its foundations the ever-resilient hydrangea lives on. In this quest I've been extremely fortunate to have had the help of Corinne and Robert Mallet in France, Mat and Mary Kay Condon in the United States and Maurice Foster in England. All these enthusiasts have introduced me to new plants and sent me material. In New Zealand I was indebted to the late Os Blumhardt, who kept an old labeled collection of hydrangeas long after most people would have dug them out as "unfashionable." With Os's help I've been able to restore some long-lost varieties to Europe and the United States. I've also trekked around the world searching for wild hydrangeas in Korea, China, and the Himalayas. In Bhutan we found hydrangea plants as big as old pear trees. Not only were they large enough to climb, but on one occasion I observed langur monkeys among their branches, teasing a yapping dog below.
Someone in the United States (Martha Stewart, I think) decided in the year 1999 to call the hydrangea "the plant of the next millennium." I would be delighted to think these shrubs could be popular for the next thousand years, and with the never-ending range of colors and new cultivars available, there's no reason that this can't be prophetic.
The macrophylla type of hydrangea has a new-found popularity, primarily for two reasons. Firstly, the shrubs are now appreciated as exceptional providers of long-lasting cut flowers to decorate homes throughout the year. Secondly, for garden use, growers have discovered what are called "remontant" varieties capable of sending up new flower stalks all summer. In cold regions flowering canes may die in winter, or the early flowers are frosted and killed in spring, resulting in no flowers during the months following. Now, with the remontant types sending up new flower stems from below the frosted buds, even people in cold regions can enjoy hydrangeas in their garden. People like Michael Dirr, professor of horticulture at the University of Georgia in Atlanta, have set up extensive breeding programs to find hardier cultivars and ones resistant to common diseases. There has also been a huge increase in the number and popularity of H. paniculata and H. quercifolia as these are more reliably hardy and will therefore grow in more regions of the country. This has encouraged nurserymen to look for new clones of these species and has given us some splendid new varieties to grace our gardens -- doubles, pinks and bicolored forms, all adding to the hydrangea's appeal.
In Japan, the home of many hydrangeas, the shrubs were long seen as inconstant because they can change color depending on the soil type in which they grow. Despite this limitation, their popularity continues with the Japanese, who are now introducing a host of delicious double-flowered lacecaps in both the macrophylla and serrata series. It seems that all over the world these classic garden shrubs are enjoying a renaissance.
(200707)

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