Vanilla Strawberry Hydrangea
Giant Cream-to-Strawberry Blooms on a Reliably Hardy Minnesota Hydrangea
Vanilla Strawberry Hydrangea (Hydrangea paniculata 'Renhy') unfurls huge cone-shaped flower heads that open creamy vanilla-white and ripen to strawberry pink and red from the bottom up, giving you a multicolor show on every panicle. As a panicle hydrangea it's one of the toughest, most cold-hardy hydrangeas you can plant — it blooms dependably across Minnesota on new wood. Whether you're anchoring a sunny border in Edina, lining a driveway in Woodbury, or cutting bouquets in Maple Grove — Vanilla Strawberry delivers a reliable summer-to-fall show in zone 4b–5a yards.
Vanilla Strawberry Hydrangea Plant Details
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Hydrangea paniculata 'Renhy' |
| Common Names | Panicle Hydrangea, Vanilla Strawberry Hydrangea |
| Mature Height | 6–7 feet |
| Mature Width | 4–5 feet |
| Growth Rate | Fast — vigorous; blooms even as a young plant |
| Sun | Full sun to part sun (6+ hours ideal). Needs more sun than oakleaf or bigleaf types. |
| Water | Moderate. Consistent moisture the first year; established plants tolerate average rainfall. |
| USDA Zones | 3–8 (Twin Cities is zone 4b–5a) — fully hardy and reliable here |
| Soil | Adaptable — tolerates Minnesota clay-loam and most soils; prefers moist, well-draining ground. |
| Foliage | Deciduous — green leaves drop in fall; flower heads dry and persist for winter interest. |
| Winter Hardiness | Reliable to -40°F. One of the hardiest hydrangeas — blooms every year in Minnesota. |
| Deer Resistance | Not deer-resistant — protect from browsing in high-pressure areas. |
| Bloom | Large panicles opening creamy white, aging to strawberry pink and red, mid-summer into fall, on new wood. |
Vanilla Strawberry Hydrangea Uses in Minnesota Landscapes
Sunny borders and specimen plantings
The big two-tone panicles make Vanilla Strawberry a showstopper at the back of a sunny border or as a standalone specimen. Give it room — it reaches 6–7 feet — and full sun for the heaviest bloom.
Hedges and screens
Planted in a row 4–5 feet apart, it forms a flowering summer screen along a driveway or property line in Plymouth or Eden Prairie. Because it blooms on new wood, it rebounds fast even after a hard Minnesota winter.
Cut and dried flowers
The panicles are superb for fresh bouquets and dry beautifully for fall arrangements — cut them as they take on their pink blush for the best color.
Best Time to Plant Vanilla Strawberry Hydrangea in Minnesota
Fall (late August–early October) is the ideal planting window. Soil is still warm for root development, cool air reduces transplant stress, and the plant gets 6–8 weeks to establish roots before ground freeze (typically mid-November in the Twin Cities).
Spring (late April–May, after the ground thaws) is the second-best window, giving the shrub a full season to establish before its first winter.
Avoid summer planting (June–August) when possible. Never plant after mid-October or before late April — frozen ground or frost-heaving kills new roots.
How to Plant Vanilla Strawberry Hydrangea
- Dig wide, not deep — 2–3× the root ball width, same depth as the container. Heavy clay benefits from even wider digging.
- Pick a sunny spot — at least 6 hours of sun for the fullest bloom and sturdiest stems.
- Backfill with native soil mixed with 20–30% compost; firm gently and water in well.
- Space 4–5 feet apart for a hedge; give specimens room to reach full width.
- Build a 3–4 inch water basin to direct water to the roots; flatten it before winter to avoid ice damage.
- Mulch 2–3 inches with shredded bark, kept 2 inches off the stems. Prune by up to a third in early spring — it blooms on new wood.
Watering Vanilla Strawberry Hydrangea in Minnesota
First Year Watering Schedule
- Weeks 1–2: Every 1–2 days, deep and slow (15–25 minutes)
- Month 1–2: Every 3–4 days
- Month 3–6: Every 5–7 days; hydrangeas wilt fast in heat, so don't let it dry out
- Stop watering 2–3 weeks before ground freeze (typically late October in the Twin Cities metro).
After Year One
Established plants need deep watering during dry spells and summer heat — panicle hydrangeas are tougher than bigleaf types but still appreciate steady moisture for the biggest blooms. Let natural rainfall do the rest.
Drip Irrigation in Minnesota
If used, place emitters 12–18 inches from the trunk and keep the root zone evenly moist. Always winterize the system — blow out the lines before freeze and shut timers off by early October.
Will Vanilla Strawberry survive a Minnesota winter?
Easily — panicle hydrangeas are hardy to zone 3, the toughest of all hydrangeas, and bloom reliably in the Twin Cities every year. No winter protection needed.
Why do panicle hydrangeas bloom when others don't?
They flower on new wood — the current season's growth — so even if winter kills the stems back, fresh spring growth still produces flowers. Old-wood types like oakleaf and bigleaf can lose their buds to a hard winter; panicles don't.
When and how do I prune it?
In early spring before growth starts, cut it back by up to a third to encourage strong stems and big blooms. Avoid fall pruning so the dried flower heads can provide winter interest.
Why are my blooms more white than pink?
The pink and red color deepens with cool nights and strong sun late in the season. More sun and the natural cooling of late summer bring out the strawberry tones.
You May Also Like
- Limelight Hydrangea — the classic lime-to-pink panicle hydrangea, equally hardy
- Strawberry Sundae Hydrangea — a more compact cream-to-red panicle for smaller yards
- Shop the full Three Timbers Minnesota catalog — zone 4-hardy plants hand-selected for Twin Cities yards