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When to Plant Hydrangeas in Franklin County, NE

Franklin County, Nebraska Zone 6a June

Your June game plan for Franklin County, Nebraska

Your garden in Franklin County, Nebraska is working on a schedule, even when you're not. Here's where you should be this June.

Avg. last frost April 29
Avg. first frost October 10
Soil temp (4") 69°F
Watering Low
Pest pressure High
Daylight 14.8 hrs
A few tasks this June that'll pay off in July
  • Starting indoors: hydrangeas
  • First harvests: hydrangeas

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Hydrangeas (Hydrangea spp.) are among the most spectacular summer-blooming shrubs, with large mophead, lacecap, or panicle flower clusters lasting weeks in the garden and drying beautifully for arrangements. Native to Asia and North America alike, the genus spans several garden species with different hardiness and blooming habits. Panicle hydrangeas (H. paniculata, e.g., Limelight) are the most cold-hardy (Zone 3) and most reliable bloomers; smooth hydrangeas (H. arborescens, e.g., Annabelle) are equally tough. Bigleaf hydrangeas (H. macrophylla) are prized for blue/pink color-shifting blooms but require reliable snow cover or winter protection in Zones 5–6. Flower color in macrophylla types is determined by soil pH (acidic = blue, alkaline = pink).

Franklin County, Nebraska is in USDA Zone 6a. The average last spring frost is April 29 and the first fall frost is October 10, giving you a growing season of approximately 164 days.

At an elevation of 1,023 feet, Franklin County receives approximately 27.3 inches of rainfall annually with predominantly loam soil. Summer highs average 87°F, providing good warmth for Hydrangeas during the growing season.

Perennial Blooms in Summer Pollinator-friendly Good for cutting
Franklin County, NE (Zone 6a) Moderate season
164 days
Last Spring Frost April 29
164 growing days
First Fall Frost October 10
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Franklin County Soil Profile

Soil Type

Loam

Soil pH

6.2-7.4

Drainage

Well Drained

Hydrangeas Planting Risk Windows

Early Start (70% safe) ✗ May not fit
Start indoors: Feb 11 Transplant: Apr 29 🌸 Bloom: Jul 8 – Oct 14
Recommended (50%) ✗ May not fit
Start indoors: Feb 18 Transplant: May 6 🌸 Bloom: Jul 15 – Oct 21
Safe Start (90%) ✗ May not fit
Start indoors: Mar 4 Transplant: May 20 🌸 Bloom: Jul 29 – Nov 4

Percentages indicate frost risk at transplant. The 70% safe window means there is a 30% chance of frost after transplant — suitable for cold-hardy crops or gardeners with frost protection. The 90% safe window is best for tender plants.

Soil Compatibility in Franklin County

How your county's soil matches Hydrangeas's growing requirements.

Soil pH

Your soil pH (6.2–7.4) is more alkaline than Hydrangeas prefers (5.5–6.5). Add sulfur or peat moss to lower pH.

Soil Texture

The loam soil in Franklin County is excellent for Hydrangeas — good drainage, moisture retention, and nutrient holding capacity.

Organic Matter

Organic matter is excellent (4.3%) — Hydrangeas will thrive.

How to Plant Hydrangeas

1"
Planting Depth
48"
Between Plants
60"
Between Rows

Hydrangeas Water Budget

Plant needs
1.0″/week
Rainfall provides
0.7″/week
You supply
0.4″/week
Watering frequency 1-2 times/week
Season total 527 gal / 100 sq ft
Drought risk

Water stress score is 6/10 — consider drought-tolerant varieties and mulching

Monthly Watering Guide for Hydrangeas

Hydrangeas needs approximately 1 inches of water per week (4.3" per month). Here's how your county's rainfall compares month by month.

Month Hydrangeas Needs Rainfall You Supplement Action
Jan 0.6" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Feb 1" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Mar 1.8" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Apr 4.3" 2.7" 1.6" 💧 Light watering
May 4.3" 4" 0.3" 💧 Light watering
Jun 4.3" 4.2" 0.1" 💧 Light watering
Jul 4.3" 3.5" 0.8" 💧 Light watering
Aug 4.3" 3.5" 0.8" 💧 Light watering
Sep 4.3" 2.6" 1.7" 💧 Light watering
Oct 4.3" 1.6" 2.7" 🚿 Regular watering
Nov 0.9" 0" ❄️ Dormant
Dec 0.8" 0" ❄️ Dormant

Water needs are for active growing months only (Apr–Oct in Franklin County). Supplement amounts are based on average rainfall — actual needs vary with temperature, soil, and mulching.

Hydrangeas Heat Requirements (GDD)

What are Growing Degree Days (GDD)?

Growing Degree Days measure the total warmth your plants receive during the growing season. Think of it as a "heat bank" — every day above 50°F deposits warmth that helps your plants grow.

Each plant needs a certain amount of accumulated heat to mature. If your county provides more GDD than the plant needs, it's a great fit. If it's close, you may want to choose faster-maturing varieties or start seeds indoors to get a head start.

Hydrangeas needs ~1,830 GDD — county provides 2,501 GDD Excellent fit

Hydrangeas Planting Timeline — Franklin County, NE

Hydrangeas Planting Calendar

Activity When Date Range
Start Indoors February 18 Feb 18 – Mar 4
Transplant Outdoors May 6 May 6 – May 20
Bloom July 15 Jul 15 – Oct 21

Plant 1" deep · 48" apart · Rows 60" apart

Month-by-Month Timeline

MonthActivities
January
February Start Indoors
March Start Indoors
April
May Transplant Outdoors
June
July Bloom
August Bloom
September Bloom
October Bloom
November
December
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Growing Conditions

☀️ Sun

Partial Shade (3-6 hours)

💧 Water

1"/week · 1-2 times/week

📅 Days to Maturity

90–150 days

🧪 Soil pH

Needs 5.5–6.5 · Your soil: too_alkaline

🗺️ USDA Zone

Zone 6a

📆 Growing Season

164 days in Franklin County

Growing Tips for Hydrangeas in Franklin County

Direct sow Hydrangeas outdoors after April 29 in Franklin County when soil has warmed and frost danger has passed.

General growing tips

Plant container-grown specimens in spring or fall, spacing at least 3–5 feet apart to allow for mature shrub spread. Most hydrangeas prefer morning sun with afternoon shade, especially in Zones 7+. Keep consistently moist — the name derives from the Greek for water vessel. Prune panicle and smooth types in late winter/early spring (they bloom on new wood). Prune bigleaf types only lightly after bloom; cutting stems in fall removes next year's buds. In Zone 5–6, protect bigleaf varieties with burlap or wire cages filled with leaves over winter. Fall planting (Zones 5+) gives excellent root establishment before summer heat. Year 2+ plants reach full size and bloom.

Companion Planting

Good Companions

Check more plant combinations with our Companion Planting Checker →

Frequently Asked Questions

When should I plant Hydrangeas in Franklin County, NE?

Franklin County is in Zone 6a with an average last frost of April 29. Plan your Hydrangeas planting based on this frost date — see the calendar above for exact timing.

What planting zone is Franklin County, NE?

Franklin County, Nebraska is in USDA Hardiness Zone 6a. The average last spring frost is April 29 and first fall frost is October 10.

🌱

Your Franklin County Garden Planner — Free

A 22-page printable planner built for Franklin County (Zone 6a). Planting dates, a month-by-month schedule, harvest log, seed inventory, and succession charts — all dialed in for your exact growing season.

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Data sources: USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map (2023), NOAA 30-Year Climate Normals. Frost dates are based on 50% probability averages for Franklin County, NE. Local conditions may vary. Last updated: June 2026.

Sources & credits

Every number on this page traces back to a primary horticulture or government data source. Click through to verify.