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Dinnerplate sized clusters of pinkish-white flowers, up to 10 inches in diameter appear in midsummer, emitting a faint sweet fragrance. Each bloom is surrounded by tear-shaped bracts of rose-pink, intensifying to rose-red as the season progresses. This rare, self-clinging deciduous vine is well-suited for partial to fully shaded sites in your garden.
This rare cultivar shows lovely pewter mottling on each heart-shaped leaf. In midsummer, large, lacy heads of hydrangea-like flowers form along its self-adhering stems, providing a dazzling, truly moonlit display. Perfect for illuminating dark, difficult sites. Easily covers walls on the north side of the home or trunks of large trees.
The Taiwanese form of this deciduous species, with large, grayish green felted foliage and enormous heads of creamy white flowers surrounded by large tear-shaped bracts, along self-clinging stems to 50 ft. or more. This was rather common at moderate elevations where it was often found growing with Pileostegia viburnoides, another climbing Hydrangea relative. Certainly more tender than the more commonly encountered S. hydrangeoides, this deserves some overhead protection, in light shade and moist but well-drained soil.
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