Snow Queen Oakleaf Hydrangea
Hydrangea quercifolia ‘Snow Queen’
Plant Details
USDA Plant Hardiness Zones: 5a-9b Find Your Zone
Plant Type: Deciduous Flowering Shrub
Height at Maturity: 5-6′
Width at Maturity: 5-6′
Spacing: 4.5-5′ for solid hedge; 10′ or more for space between plants
Growth Habit / Form: Mounding
Flower Color: White fading to pinkish-purple
Flower Size: 8 to 12 inches long
Flowering Period: Summer
Flower Type: Single, in clusters
Fragrant Flowers: No
Foliage Color: Green shades in Summer, Red, Purple and Bronze shades in Fall
Fragrant Foliage: No
Berries: NA
Berry Color: NA
Sun Needs: Part Shade (morning sun woth afternoon shade or all day filtered sun)
Water Needs: Average, low when established
Soil Type: Clay (amended), Loam, Sand (amended), Silt
Soil Moisture / Drainage: Well Drained Moist
Soil pH: 5.5 – 7.5 (Acid to Slightly Alkaline)
Maintenance / Care: Very Low
Attracts: Visual Attention
Resistances: Disease, Drought (when established in part shade), Heat, Humidity, Insect
Description
The Snow Queen Oakleaf Hydrangea features showy, elongated flower clusters up to 12 inches long on sturdy stems that won’t bend even in soaking rain. The flowers start out white and gradually turn to a beautiful pinkish-purple color as they age. As with other oakleaf hydrangeas, the leaves of Snow Queen are deeply lobed, resembling the shape of an oak leaf, but the overall shrub is smaller than the species growing only 5 to 6 feet tall and wide. The large leaves (up to 8 inches long) are a deep green during the season turning to spectacular shades of purple, maroon-red, and bronze during the fall. Exfoliating bark provides winter interest in the garden.
Landscape & Garden Uses
Growing in a mound 5 to 6 feet tall and maybe a little wider, the Snow Queen Hydrangea is an excellent selection for smaller garden spaces where larger oakleaf hydrangeas won’t fit. In larger landscape spaces it is ideal for use as a specimen, grouped in clusters, or as an attractive, colorful hedge that provides year round color and interest. It is right at home in partly shaded woodland borders or cottage and cut flower gardens. Also a nice addition to white color themed gardens and tropical-look gardens.
Suggested Spacing: 4.5 to 5 feet apart for solid hedge; 10 feet or more apart for space between plants
Note: For our customers who live and garden north of USDA Cold Hardiness Zone 5a, where this Hydrangea is not reliably winter hardy, you’ll be happy to know that it can be grown in containers that can be brought indoors during winter and place back outside when temperatures warm up in spring.
Growing Preferences
Snow Queen Oakleaf Hydrangea is easy to grow and resistant to pests and diseases. It thrives in any location from full sun to deep shade in moist, rich, well-drained soil. In hotter climates of the South some afternoon shade or lightly filtered sun is recommended.
Note: Oakleaf hydrangeas typically require little to no pruning. They are best left alone. That said they can be pruned to remove a stray branch or to reduce size. Snow Queen is a Hydrangea quercifolia (oakleaf) species that produces its flowers from buds that formed on “old wood” (during the previous year).
For proper pruning time and techniques on various types of Hydrangea see: How To Prune Various Types Of Hydrangea
Helpful Articles
Click on a link below to find advice from our experts on how to plant and care for Hydrangeas.
How To Plant Hydrangeas In The Ground & Pots
How To Prune Various Types Of Hydrangea
How To Fertilize And Water Hydrangeas
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