Tag Archives: Proven Winners Color Choice

July Pegplant’s Post Giveaway: Proven Winners Color Choice Tuff Stuff Hydrangea

Thank you Proven Winners Color Choice for sponsoring the July Pegplant’s Post giveaway. The winner will receive a Tuff Stuff hydrangea (Hydrangea serrata), in a 3-gallon container. Tuff Stuff has deep pink lacecap flowers that bloom all summer long. This hydrangea has improved bud and stem hardiness in addition to the ability to flower on new wood. Proven Winners is a well known, reliable name in garden centers, Color Choice is their line of shrubs. Look for their distinctive containers at your local nursery. Pegplant’s Post is a free monthly newsletter for Washington DC metro area gardeners. To view a previous issue, click here, and to subscribe, click on the “subscribe” button on right margin of pegplant.com 

Gardener Bloggers Bloom Day: ‘Sugar Tip’ Rose of Sharon

Sugar Tip double flowers

Sugar Tip double flowers

Today is Garden Bloggers Bloom Day, the 15th of the month. Seven years ago, I was given a cultivar of the rose of Sharon shrub called Sugar Tip (Hibiscus syriacus) by Proven Winners Color Choice. I was unsure as I knew rose of Sharon plants were weedy, self-seeders. Like tall, thin cowboys, they provide lanky silhouettes across our Virginia countryside, too common to actually purchase and plant in one’s garden. But I had a particular space against the back fence that needed shrubs in full sun so I planted the cowboys, knowing they could take anything. Fortunately for me, my Sugar Tip plants grew to be large, robust shrubs, about 6 feet tall and 4 feet wide. Although their shape is still vase-like at the bottom, at the top they are broad enough to screen out the view of the neighbors in the back forty. Unlike the species, Sugar Tip’s foliage is variegated green and cream and the entire bush is studded with pink, double flowers that look more like roses than the few simple, hibiscus-like flowers on the species.

Sugar Tip buds

Sugar Tip buds

In addition to beauty, my Sugar Tip shrubs grow in full sun, too far away from the garden hose, so the only water they receive is rain. Rose of Sharon is a “low maintenance,” deciduous shrub, tolerant of our Virginia heat and humidity. I never fertilize and I don’t prune (or worse, spend time deadheading the spent flowers), yet my Sugar Tip bushes thrive in the summer and bloom continuously until the fall. Try growing a variegated rose of Sharon cultivar such as Sugar Tip instead of the species and you will be pleasantly surprised.

Sugar Tip variegated leaves

Sugar Tip variegated leaves