Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Hydrangea
A Reblooming Blue Mophead Hydrangea for Sheltered Minnesota Beds
Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue (Hydrangea macrophylla) is a reblooming bigleaf hydrangea with big rounded mophead flowers in rich blue or pink, depending on soil pH. Like other rebloomers it flowers on both old and new wood, so it can still bloom after a Minnesota winter sets the stems back. It's at the cold edge of its range here and does best in a sheltered, part-shade spot. Whether you're brightening a protected foundation in Edina, a courtyard bed in Woodbury, or chasing the classic blue mophead in Maple Grove — Rhythmic Blue brings that coveted color to sheltered zone 4b–5a yards.
Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Hydrangea Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Hydrangea macrophylla 'SMNHMSIGMA' |
| Common Names | Bigleaf Hydrangea, Mophead Hydrangea, Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue |
| Mature Height | 2–3 feet |
| Mature Width | 2–3 feet |
| Growth Rate | Moderate — compact, rounded habit |
| Sun | Part shade. Morning sun with afternoon shade is ideal in Minnesota; protect from hot afternoon sun. |
| Water | Moderate to high. Needs consistent moisture — bigleaf hydrangeas wilt quickly when dry. |
| USDA Zones | 5–9 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a — marginal; reblooms on new wood, plant in a sheltered spot) |
| Soil | Rich, moist, well-draining. Acidic soil yields blue flowers; alkaline (typical MN clay) yields pink. |
| Foliage | Deciduous — glossy green leaves; dies back in winter, especially old wood in cold years. |
| Winter Hardiness | At its cold edge here. Old-wood buds can be killed in a hard winter, but it reblooms on new wood. Mulch the crown and site it in a protected microclimate with good snow cover. |
| Deer Resistance | Not deer-resistant — protect from browsing. |
| Bloom | Rounded mophead heads, blue or pink by soil pH, summer into fall, reblooming on old and new wood. |
Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Hydrangea Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Protected part-shade beds
Give it morning sun and afternoon shade in a wind-sheltered spot — a north or east foundation, courtyard, or a bed protected by other shrubs — where snow collects and buffers the cold.
The classic blue mophead
For blue flowers, acidify the soil with aluminum sulfate; in typical alkaline Minnesota clay the blooms lean pink. The reblooming habit keeps flowers coming through summer.
Containers
A large container lets you control pH for blue blooms and move the plant to a protected spot for winter — a reliable approach in the Twin Cities.
Best Time to Plant Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Hydrangea in Minnesota
Spring (late April–May) is the best window for this marginal shrub, giving it a full season to establish strong roots before its first winter.
Early fall (late August–mid September) also works if you plant early enough for 6–8 weeks of root growth before ground freeze, then mulch heavily.
Avoid summer planting and never plant after mid-October or before late April — frozen ground or frost-heaving kills new roots.
How to Plant Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Hydrangea
- Choose a sheltered, part-shade spot — morning sun, afternoon shade, out of harsh wind, where snow collects.
- Dig wide, not deep — 2–3× the root ball width, same depth as the container.
- Backfill with native soil plus 20–30% compost; rich, moisture-retentive but well-draining soil is best.
- For blue flowers, amend with aluminum sulfate or elemental sulfur; for pink, leave alkaline clay as-is.
- Build a water basin and keep the soil consistently moist — this plant wilts fast when dry.
- Mulch 3–4 inches for winter root and crown protection, kept off the stems. Don't cut back old wood in fall or spring — leave it to bloom.
Watering Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Hydrangea in Minnesota
First Year Watering Schedule
- Weeks 1–2: Every 1–2 days, deep and slow — keep evenly moist
- Month 1–2: Every 2–3 days
- Month 3–6: Every 3–5 days; never let it wilt, especially in summer heat
- Stop watering 2–3 weeks before ground freeze (typically late October in the Twin Cities metro).
After Year One
Bigleaf hydrangeas are the thirstiest hydrangeas — water deeply during any dry spell and through summer heat. Consistent moisture is the key to good bloom and avoiding midday wilt.
Drip Irrigation in Minnesota
Drip keeps bigleaf hydrangeas evenly moist — place emitters 12–18 inches from the crown and run regularly in heat. Always winterize the system — blow out the lines before freeze and shut timers off by early October.
Will Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue bloom in Minnesota?
It can — it reblooms on new wood, so it flowers even when a hard winter kills the old stems, though bloom is later and best in a sheltered, well-mulched spot. Panicle hydrangeas are more foolproof if you want guaranteed flowers.
How do I get blue flowers?
Flower color depends on soil pH: acidic makes blue, alkaline makes pink. Minnesota clay tends alkaline, so add aluminum sulfate for blue, or grow it in a container to control pH.
Should I cut it back?
Avoid hard pruning — leave the old stems, which carry early buds. Remove only clearly dead wood in late spring once you see where it's leafing out.
Is it reliably hardy here?
It's at the cold edge of its range in the Twin Cities. With a protected spot, winter mulch, and good snow cover it performs well; in an exposed site expect later, lighter bloom.
You May Also Like
- Endless Summer The Original — a reblooming blue/pink mophead bred for cold
- Limelight Hydrangea — a panicle that blooms reliably every year in MN with no fuss
- Shop the full Three Timbers Minnesota catalog — zone 4-hardy plants hand-selected for Twin Cities yards
How Many Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Do I Need?
For a low mass in a protected part-shade bed, set plants on 2.5-foot centers (mature spread 2–3 ft):
| Run length | Plants at 2.5 ft spacing |
|---|---|
| 10 ft | 5 |
| 20 ft | 9 |
| 30 ft | 13 |
A drift of 3 on 2.5-foot centers gives the classic mophead mass; a single plant wants a 3-foot pocket by an east entry, or a large container where you control the pH for true blue.
Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Season-by-Season in Minnesota
- Spring: One of the garden's latest risers — bare stems into late May are normal. Hold off pruning until June, then remove only wood that never leafed out.
- Summer: Rounded mopheads open rich blue in acidic soil (pink in alkaline clay) and rebloom on new wood through the season; steady moisture is non-negotiable — it wilts fast in heat.
- Fall: Flowers keep coming until frost. After leaf drop, mound 3–4 inches of leaf mulch over the crown to bank next year's old-wood buds.
- Winter: Stem dieback in a hard winter is expected, not fatal — the mulched crown and snow cover protect the new-wood buds that restart the show.
At a Glance
✔ Shade-Tolerant
Plant It With
- Endless Summer The Original Hydrangea — the body's own pick: the cold-climate reblooming mophead standard.
- Limelight Hydrangea — the body's foolproof panicle for guaranteed bloom behind the mopheads.
- Let's Dance Blue Jangles Hydrangea — its more compact sibling for the front of the same drift.
- Let's Dance Arriba Hydrangea — pink-purple Let's Dance partner for a two-tone planting.
Is Let's Dance Rhythmic Blue Right for Your Yard?
Plant Rhythmic Blue if you can offer a sheltered morning-sun bed — north or east foundation, courtyard, somewhere snow collects — plus consistent water and a fall mulch blanket; that's the recipe for the classic blue mophead in the Twin Cities. Not a fit for exposed windy sites, dry soil, or unprotected deer territory — it's at its cold edge here and deer will browse it, so an easy-care yard is better served by a panicle hydrangea.