Astilbe chinensis Mighty Pip
SKU: 14ASTILBE3
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Overview
This Astilbe’s name says it all - The Mighty Pip is one of the tallest Astilbes, reaching over four feet tall. Its salmon pink blooms make this a show-stopper in any shade garden. (Astilbe chinensis)
key features
Botanical Name
Astilbe chinensis
Advantages
Deer Resistant, Cut Flowers
Growing Zones
Zone 3, Zone 4, Zone 5, Zone 6, Zone 7, Zone 8, Zone 9
Light Requirements
Half Sun / Half Shade, Full Shade
Soil Moisture
Average, Moist / Wet
Mature Height
40-48" tall
Mature Spread
40-48" wide
Bloom Time
Mid to late summer
SKU
14ASTILBE3
Description
The Mighty Pip Astilbe should be planted in a shady area and will bloom mid to late summer. This Astilbe was a Gold Medal Winner at Plantarium 2009 and is a large, beautiful statement for any shade garden.
About Astilbes: Easy to grow, tough and hardy, Astilbes are now a mainstay in all good perennial gardens. In fact, American gardeners are in the midst of a passionate love affair with Astilbes. Native to the far east, these beautiful plants and their hybrids have revolutionized the perennial possibilities of moist, shaded American gardens. They are companions of ferns and our favorite annuals, impatiens--one of the few flowers that make big color in full or partial shade.
The vast majority of the scores of hybrids now available are the work of one man, master hybridizer Georg Arends (Yes, that's why you keep seeing arendsii tacked onto hybrid names.) Mr. Arends, working in Ronsdorf, Germany spent decades hybridizing Sedums, Phlox, Campanulas....and his first love, Astilbes. In 1933, Arends introduced 74 different Astilbe cultivars, and there have been hundreds since.
These plume-flowered plants have ultra-handsome fern-like foliage, (usually dark glossy green) and stiff stems that always hold the elegant plumes aloft without any staking. Flower arrangers find the flower plumes are just as handsome in a vase as in a garden.
From tiny dwarfs to big draping hybrids, Astilbes are all quite easy to grow, as long as their ground does not dry out for long. They must have plenty of moisture, so choose your locations carefully.