A Guide to Hydrangea Winter Care (2024)

Gardening

Flowers

By

Peg Aloi

Peg Aloi

Peg Aloi is a gardening expert and former garden designer with 13 years experience working as a professional gardener in the Boston and upstate New York areas. She received her certificate in horticulture from the Berkshire Botanical Garden in 2018.

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Updated on 09/13/22

Reviewed by

Kathleen Miller

Reviewed byKathleen Miller

Kathleen Miller is a highly-regarded Master Gardener and horticulturist with over 30 years of experience in organic gardening, farming, and landscape design. She founded Gaia's Farm and Gardens,aworking sustainable permaculture farm, and writes for Gaia Grows, a local newspaper column.

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Hydrangeas are a well-loved and popular garden shrub that bring reliable beauty with their lush blooms. There are five main types of hydrangea:

  1. Macrophylla or big leaf (including mophead and lacecap hydrangeas, and blue or pink-flowered varieties like Nikko Blue)
  2. Panicle/paniculata (including white-flowered varieties that change to green and rose tones)
  3. Smoothleaf hydrangeas (like Limelight)
  4. Oakleaf hydrangeas
  5. Climbing hydrangeas.

These all have varying degrees of winter hardiness, so it's crucial to know their growing zone limits and their potential vulnerability in winter weather.

Paniculata and smoothleaf hydrangeas are generally very cold hardy, as are oakleaf hydrangeas and climbing hydrangeas, so these varieties don't usually need additional winter protection.

Macrophylla hydrangeas, however, are a different story. An occasional problem with macrophylla hydrangeas is their failure to flower in summer. There's a common misconception that this problem can be addressed by simply using fertilizer. But, actually, the more likely reason for this is a failure of the flower buds, which begin forming in late summer, to survive cold winter temperatures. Blue-flowering macrophylla hydrangeas, for example, are sometimes only winter hardy to Zone 6, meaning a cold winter can potentially kill the buds.

Consider your Hydrangea Location

Hydrangeas growing in pots can be brought indoors for the winter, either inside your home or in a garage to prevent freezing temperatures from shocking them. Bring hydrangeas inside before the first frost of fall. Water the plants sparingly to prevent the dormant plant's roots from sitting in water, adding just enough to moisten the soil after it dries out.

For hydrangeas planted in the ground, the first consideration for winter care is to figure out if the shrub is planted in an appropriate location. If your macrophylla hydrangea has a hardiness zone classification where the lowest zone is even slightly higher than the one you live in, your hydrangea will very likely fail to form spring buds. Even if the zone is the same, if your shrub is too exposed to winter weather, this might also damage the buds.

Many mophead and other macrophylla hydrangeas are generally hardy in USDA Zones 6 to 9. Recent cultivars such as the "Endless Summer" varieties are meant to be hardy in Zones 5 to 8 (although the "Endless Summer Bloomstruck" variety is hardy to Zone 4). The "Cityline" hydrangeas are mostly hardy to Zone 5.

To be on the safe side, if you live in a cold zone with a typical Northeast winter, your hydrangea should be hardy to at least Zone 5. Planting your hydrangea near a structure that holds some heat (like a brick building or foundation) and in a spot that gets bright sunlight and shelter from the wind in winter will help.

If your macrophylla hydrangea only blooms occasionally in summer, or sometimes skips a year of blooming, moving it to a more protected site may increase the chances it will bloom. Mulching the base will help to some extent as well, but the main area to be protected is the budding branches.

A Guide to Hydrangea Winter Care (3)

Methods of Winter Protection

There are a few steps you can take to protect your mophead and lacecap hydrangeas in winter. One fairly common method is to create a simple structure that will help insulate your plant. This structure needs to allow air to circulate.

Placing garden stakes in a circle around the shrub and wrapping with burlap, chicken wire or an open-weave natural fiber fabric are all effective. Inside this makeshift structure, you can layer some lightweight insulation material such as pine straw or oak leaves. This will create a protective "zone" of warmer air and wind protection.

Keep this structure in place all winter and remove as temperatures begin to warm in spring. As wind or snow cause the insulation material to settle, thereby exposing the tips of budding branches, you'll want to add more material to replace it. Gather enough pine straw (long dried pine needles) and large oak leaves in autumn and keep in a paper lawn bag, sheltered from rain, to use later. Some gardeners find cutting a piece of styrofoam or cardboard to place over the top of the structure will prevent further damage to buds from winter weather.

Another method for protecting hydrangeas is to wrap them loosely in foam (such as egg-crate foam) or insulation material (such as the foil insulation used to mail climate-controlled packages).

Wrap the entire shrub, taking care not to break any branches, and secure gently but firmly with twine, clips and/or duct tape. Some creative gardeners make these wrapped shrubs look like big wrapped gifts, with a ribbon tied up in bows, coinciding with the winter holidays.

There are commercially-made structures you can purchase from your garden store for hydrangea protection as well, but a creative gardener can often make do with found materials and objects already in the garden shed.

Winter Water and Food for Your Hydrangea

Hydrangeas, as the name suggests, need hydration to thrive. Keeping them well watered before the ground freezes in winter helps the roots and shrub stay stronger for the season. Drying winter winds can also sap moisture from shrubs.

Feeding your hydrangea's surrounding soil with nutrients will also help it stay healthy during the winter. Soil that has used up too many nutrients can become "thin" and will make plants more vulnerable to winter damage.

A top-dressing of compost or composted manure makes a perfect meal for your hydrangea to digest over the long winter season. A mix of used coffee grounds and wood ash is also fine. These additions add acidity and alkalinity to the soil, respectively, and adding both together helps balance the soil pH levels, as well as feeds the soil with organic nutrients.

An added layer of lightweight natural mulch (such as pine bark mulch, oak leaves, hay, or pine straw) will help keep moisture levels consistent. Ideally, an early blanket of snow helps with this too, but these days we can't always rely on "normal" weather patterns.

Add six to eight inches of mulch over the compost layer, but only after the ground freezes. Mulching before a hard frost might attract rodents to the base of the plant, or fool the plant into thinking it's warmer than it is. Waiting until after hard frost will mean the plant has gone further into its dormant winter state, and the added protection will be like a winter blanket.

In spring, gently clear away the mulch when the danger of hard frost has passed.

A Guide to Hydrangea Winter Care (2024)

FAQs

Do I need to do anything to my hydrangea for winter? ›

Keep Them Cozy. Whether or not hydrangeas need protection depends on how cold the winter temperatures drop. If the air temperature doesn't go below 0 degrees (zone 7) there is no need for winter protection. In colder climates, wrap or completely cover marginally hardy hydrangeas.

Should I cut off brown hydrangea blooms in winter? ›

Next year's flower buds won't be formed until late spring the same year they bloom, so there is no risk of removing the buds if you prune in fall or spring. If you like the look of dried flower heads in your garden in the wintertime, leave them on and prune them in spring.

What month do you cut hydrangeas back? ›

Hydrangea macrophylla, bigleaf hydrangea

These plants produce buds in late summer to early fall (August-September) that will form next year's flowers. So prune these shrubs after they finish blooming and before August (again, make a heading cut).

Should I cut my hydrangea to the ground in winter? ›

Prune back stems to just above a fat bud — called a heading cut — in fall, late winter or spring. These plants have conical-shaped flower heads. I recommend leaving the dry, tan flower heads on the plant to provide some winter interest in your landscape, so I wait to prune these until late winter or spring.

Do you cut hydrangeas to the ground in the winter? ›

In late winter or early spring, these shrubs can be cut all the way back to the ground. Smooth hydrangeas will produce much larger blooms if pruned hard like this each year, but many gardeners opt for smaller blooms on sturdier stems.

How far do you cut back hydrangeas in the winter? ›

Trim bigleaf hydrangeas back to a set of healthy buds after the flowers have faded, in late summer, before the plant begins to go dormant. Use sharp, clean trimmers to cut stems just higher than a pair of leaves, says Becker. For a heavier prune, remove the gray, older. or dead stems during the winter.

Can you cut hydrangeas down to the ground in the fall? ›

New Wood Bloomers

It is easy to grow these hydrangeas because they bloom every year regardless of how they are cared for or treated. They can be pruned to the ground in the fall and they will emerge in the spring with bountiful blooms.

How far down do you cut hydrangeas in the fall? ›

To reduce the size of a hydrangea that blooms on new wood, cut off about one-third of each stem in late fall or early spring before it begins to leaf out. If your hydrangea blooms on old wood, prune right after it has bloomed when the flowers are fading.

Are coffee grounds good for hydrangeas? ›

If you're growing hydrangeas, use coffee grounds to affect their color. Coffee grounds add extra acidity to the soil around hydrangeas. On a chemical level, this increased acidity makes it easier for the plant to absorb naturally occurring aluminum in the dirt. The effect is pretty blue clusters of flowers.

Is it better to prune hydrangeas in fall or spring? ›

While some plants bloom on new growth, others primarily set flower buds on old wood. Regardless, it is best to wait to prune all hydrangeas until spring. In the fall, hydrangeas (and all trees and shrubs) are in the process of going dormant. They do not produce very much new growth until the following spring.

What temperature kills hydrangeas? ›

Some varieties, like smooth hydrangea (“Annabelle”) and panicle, or PG hydrangea, are very cold-hardy and bloom on new wood. If these are the species in your garden, you don't have to worry about winter kill on hydrangea. They don't need protection unless the temperature dips below negative 30 degrees F.

What brings hydrangeas back to life? ›

Remove the wilted hydrangeas from your arrangement and re-cut the stems on a 45-degree angle. Make a vertical slit in the incision and hold the stem upright in the boiling water for about 60 seconds. Place the hydrangeas back in your floral arrangement and they should revive themselves in an hour or so.

How do I know if my hydrangea is dormant or dead? ›

Check whether Hydrangea is dead or dormant by scratching the stem surface. No green stems underneath with zero sprouts may indicate a dead plant, while a live branch but no growth indicates a winter stressed plant.

What do you do with endless summer hydrangeas in the winter? ›

If you live in Zone 6 or warmer, you can treat it like any other plant and lightly cover the crown and leave the container in place. For the colder parts of the country, cover the crown and move the container into your garage or basem*nt once it has gone dormant.

What do you do with hydrangeas in the fall? ›

Cut the dead stumps down to their base to completely remove them. This will allow the new growth underneath to have a chance to succeed. Dead and old blooms need to be removed to make room for new buds to come through. Cut the flower head off right above the first few leaves to encourage blooms for the next summer.

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