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PF196
Hydrangeas have been around for a long time. The oldest fossils of the plant/flowers have been found in the western U.S. and Canada, dating back a massive 40 to 65 million years old (That’s right around the time the dinosaurs walked the planet). More recently, fossils have also been found in Asia, where people first started cultivating the flowers thousands of years ago. Hydrangeas didn’t make it to Europe until 1736, when a man named Peter Collison brought them back from the Pennsylvania colony. It was given the name hydrangea for the Greek word’s hydro (meaning water) and angeion (meaning pitcher) because the big flower blooms were thought to look like water pitchers.
Some say the plant originated in Japan, but being virtually closed to the world, no Asian varieties made their way to Europe until 1775, when the Swedish naturalist Carl Peter Thunberg managed to get his hands on five plants. Since then, hydrangeas have taken the world by storm.
In the language of flowers, the light green hydrangea represents abundance and growth.
Hydrangeas have been around for a long time. The oldest fossils of the plant/flowers have been found in the western U.S. and Canada, dating back a massive 40 to 65 million years old (That’s right around the time the dinosaurs walked the planet). More recently, fossils have also been found in Asia, where people first started cultivating the flowers thousands of years ago. Hydrangeas didn’t make it to Europe until 1736, when a man named Peter Collison brought them back from the Pennsylvania colony. It was given the name hydrangea for the Greek word’s hydro (meaning water) and angeion (meaning pitcher) because the big flower blooms were thought to look like water pitchers.
Some say the plant originated in Japan, but being virtually closed to the world, no Asian varieties made their way to Europe until 1775, when the Swedish naturalist Carl Peter Thunberg managed to get his hands on five plants. Since then, hydrangeas have taken the world by storm.
In the language of flowers, the light green hydrangea represents abundance and growth.