Skip to content
Jackson Park WildflowersJackson Park Wildflowers
Jackson Park WildflowersJackson Park Wildflowers
  • Home
  • Discover
    • Get Started
    • Plant Finder
    • Glossary
    • Browse by Genera
    • Other Biota — lower plants and Fungi
    • Other Biota — animals
  • Explore
    • Jackson Park — Scoreboard
  • About
  • Glossary
  • Plant Finder
  • 0
    Cart

    No products in the cart.

    Return to shop

Home / Plant Finder / Hydrangea
Filter

Showing the single result

Sorting
Filtered (1)
Filter Plants
  • Reset all×
  • Radial×
  • Opposite×
Filter Plants

1 product found

Show (1)
Cancel
  • Reset all×
  • Radial×
  • Opposite×
Filtered (1)
Wild hydrangea canes produce a flat terminal panicle 3-6" across with 100-500 flowers of two kinds  — small, fertile flowers filling most of the area and a few, sterile pseudo-flowers around the margin that are 3-4 times larger than the flowers in the center and seem to function only as an advertisement for pollinators. The central, fertile flowers are about 1/4" across with a green calyx made of five separate sepals; five greenish-white or cream petals about 1/8" long; 8-10 stamens with long filaments and oblong, white anthers; and a pistil bearing two styles with knob- or club-like stigmas. The sterile, outer pseudo-flowers have 3-4 fused petal-like, white bracts (or sepals; sources differ) with a central structures that visually is reminiscent of stamens or styles; the pseudo-flowers persist long after the inner flowers have been fertilized and have produced a two compartment seed pod that is ribbed and bears a pair of tiny horns (the styles) on its upper end. Wild hydrangea is relatively rare in northern Illinois; in Jackson Park it prefers wooded area by walking paths.
Quick View

Hydrangea

Hydrangea arborescens

wild hydrangea [Blooms: Jun-Aug]

Plant Finder Glossary
Discover
Explore
About

I want to acknowledge the work of a friend and colleague, Dr. Fred Donner. We both share a passion for the flowers in Jackson Park. Fred's website (jacksonparkwildflowers.org) inspired me to build my own website and database; use and enjoy them both.

I am also pleased to thank my ninja web gurus and coders, Lindsey Young and Stefanie Engstrom. This site would not exist without their herculean labors.

Copyright 2026 © Michael LaBarbera

  • Home
  • Discover
    • Get Started
    • Plant Finder
    • Glossary
    • Browse by Genera
    • Other Biota — lower plants and Fungi
    • Other Biota — animals
  • Explore
    • Jackson Park — Scoreboard
  • About
  • Login
  • Newsletter
  • Plant Finder