Hydrangea anomala subsp. petiolaris 'Miranda'
Common Name: climbing hydrangea 
Type: Vine
Family: Hydrangeaceae
Zone: 4 to 8
Height: 30.00 to 50.00 feet
Spread: 5.00 to 6.00 feet
Bloom Time: May
Bloom Description: White
Sun: Part shade to full shade
Water: Medium
Maintenance: Low
Suggested Use: Annual
Flower: Showy, Fragrant, Good Cut, Good Dried
Leaf: Colorful, Good Fall
Other: Winter Interest
Tolerate: Rabbit, Drought, Heavy Shade

Culture

Best grown in rich, fertile, moist but well-drained soils in part shade to full shade. Tolerates full sun only if grown with consistently moist soils. Somewhat intolerant of the hot and humid conditions of the deep South, and typically will not thrive in USDA Zone 8. Slow to establish, but quite vigorous thereafter. Propagate by seeds or stem cuttings.

Noteworthy Characteristics

Hydrangea anomala, commonly known as climbing hydrangea, is a vigorous, sprawling, deciduous, woody vine that clings and climbs by twining and aerial rootlets along the stems, typically maturing over time to 30-40’ long. Horizontal lateral branching often extends several feet beyond supporting structures. Unsupported vines sometimes will grow in the form of a mounding shrub to 3-4’ tall, sprawling along the ground like a ground cover eventually covering an area of up to 200 square feet. This plant is native to wooded valleys, stream banks and mountain slopes in the Himalayas and China. Opposite, simple, serrate, ovate, dark green leaves (to 4” long) have cordate bases and turn shades of yellow in fall. Fragrant white flowers in flat-topped clusters (to 8” wide) bloom in late spring to early summer (May-June). Each flower cluster consists of non-showy, creamy white to greenish-yellow fertile flowers in the center surrounded by showy white sterile flowers. Dried flower heads are reddish brown. Exfoliating bark on mature stems is also reddish brown and attractive in winter. Fruit ripens in September-October. Flattened clusters (corymbs 6-10” wide) of fragrant, white flowers in a lacecap configuration (small creamy white to greenish yellow fertile flowers in the center with a marginal ring of showy white sterile flowers) bloom in late spring to early summer (June-July). Fewer than 10 stamens per flower. Exfoliating, reddish brown bark of mature plants is attractive in winter. Once established, this vine can develop a somewhat bushy habit, with lateral branches growing out several feet from the support structure, thus giving the foliage a somewhat tiered effect.

Species plants are considered to be less ornamental than subspecies petiolaris, and accordingly are less frequently available in commerce. Subsp. petiolaris and cultivars there-under have become very popular landscape plants.

Subsp. petiolaris (formerly known as Hydrangea petiolaris) is native to eastern Siberia, Japan, China and South Korea. It differs from the species by its larger growth (matures to 60’ long), larger flower clusters (to 10” diameter), fewer showy sterile flowers per cluster, more than 10 stamens per flower, elliptic-ovate leaves (to 6” long) and better winter hardiness. Subspecies name is in reference to the long petioles of this plant.

The genus name Hydrangea comes from hydor meaning "water" and aggeion meaning "vessel", in reference to the cup-like capsular fruit.

Specific epithet comes from the Greek word anomalas in reference to the vine-like plant habit.

‘Miranda’ is a variegated form of the subspecies. It features serrate, heart-shaped, dark green leaves (to 4” long) with yellow margins. Leaf margins may fade to creamy white as summer progresses. Some authorities consider ‘Miranda’ to be synonymous with ‘Firefly’ (Dirr lists MIRANDA as a trade name of ‘Firefly’). Both cultivars have yellow leaf margins and are for all practical purposes indistinguishable from each other. Both cultivars were discovered independently at about the same time with ‘Firefly’ being subsequently patented as PP11,038 on August 24, 1999.

Problems

No serious insect or disease problems. Needs a strong support structure if grown vertically on walls, fences or into large trees.

Uses

This is an extremely versatile vine with year-round interest. It can be particularly effective when grown against building walls (brick, stone or wood) where it can easily attach and cling by “holdfasts” to the surface. It is also effective when grown on a wide variety of other structures, including arbors, fences or the trunks of large trees, or sprawled over low stone walls, unsightly tree stumps or rock piles. It is much less frequently grown as a ground cover in shady areas or on steep embankments.