Genus

Hydrangea

The Hydrangea genus in the Plotwright catalog — 4 species: Annabelle hydrangea, Bigleaf hydrangea, Oakleaf hydrangea, Panicle hydrangea. Open any for hardiness, native range, wildlife value, and growing guidance.
Hydrangea arborescens
Annabelle hydrangea
A native eastern-US deciduous shrub — 'Annabelle' is a sterile-flowered cultivar of smooth hydrangea — with very large white snowball blooms in summer. Blooms on new wood so spring frost cannot destroy the flower display, and serves as the larval host for the hydrangea sphinx moth.
Shrub
Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 3a-9b
Climate: broad
Focal point
Structure
Hydrangea macrophylla
Bigleaf hydrangea
A woody, deciduous flowering shrub in the Hydrangeaceae, native to Japan, China, Korea, and Southeast Asia and long grown as the classic "hortensia" or French hydrangea. NC State Extension describes a rounded shrub 3 to 6 feet tall and wide with large opposite, simple, toothed leaves (4-8 inches long) and big rounded mop-head or flat lacecap flower clusters in late spring and summer in white, pink, blue, or purple. Famously, flower color tracks soil chemistry — acidic soils push the blooms blue and alkaline soils turn them pink. It wants protection from hot afternoon sun and steady moisture, making it a mainstay of shaded foundation plantings and woodland borders.
Shrub
Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 6a-11b
Climate: moderate
Focal point
Structure
Border
Container
Hydrangea quercifolia
Oakleaf hydrangea
A four-season native shrub of the southeastern United States, where NC State Extension notes it grows wild in moist woods and along stream banks. It is an upright, multi-stemmed deciduous shrub, slow-growing to roughly 4-8 feet tall and 4-10 feet wide, named for its large, oak-shaped, lobed dark-green leaves. Showy pyramidal 4-12 inch panicles of creamy-white flowers open from late spring into summer and fade to pink and then tan, while the bold foliage turns wine, orange, and mahogany in fall over peeling cinnamon bark. Easy and low-maintenance in organically rich, well-drained soil, it is grown as a specimen, in masses, or as an informal hedge.
Shrub
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: moderate
Focal point
Structure
Border
Pollinator
Hydrangea paniculata
Panicle hydrangea
The toughest, most cold-hardy, and most sun-tolerant of the common hydrangeas, grown for big cone-shaped (panicle) flower clusters that open creamy white in mid to late summer and age to pink, rose, or tawny tan as the season cools. Because it blooms on new wood, it flowers reliably even after hard winters and can be pruned hard in late winter without losing the show. Native to eastern and southern China, Japan, Sakhalin, and the Kuril Islands, the species is large — an arching, multi-stemmed, often vase-shaped shrub that can reach the size of a small tree — though most garden cultivars are bred smaller. It wants full sun to part shade and consistent moisture; all parts are toxic if eaten.
Shrub
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 3a-8b
Climate: moderate
Focal point
Structure
Border