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Syringa Bloomerang Ballet™ ('SMNSPH')

Bloomerang Ballet™ Reblooming Lilac: Patent PP35,934

  • »  Pink blooms in the spring
  • »  Strong reblooming ability
  • »  A great candidate for cut flower gardens
  • »  Great disease resistance
  • »  Fragrant flower
  • »  Fall interest

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Like a real ballerina, Bloomerang Ballet lilac puts on a dainty looking show with incredible strength and dedication. It puts out an abundance of frilly pink blooms in the spring, has a brief intermission in early summer, and a gorgeous rebloom performance from late summer into fall. It’s our strongest rebloomer yet! Thanks to good disease resistance, you’ll get to enjoy its foliage as well as its flowers. A great candidate for cut flower gardens, as it blends well with other stems or makes a lovely single species arrangement.

Foliage Color
Green
Maintenance and Care
Disease Resistant
Mass Planting
Attracts Wildlife
Attracts Butterflies
Supports Bees
Critter Resistance
Deer Resistant
Flower Color
Pink
Programs
Proven Winners
Season of Interest (Flowering)
Spring
Late Spring
Early Summer
Summer Bloomer
Late Summer
Exposure
Full Sun
Habit
Upright
Soil Moisture
Average Water
Moist, Well-Drained
Growing & Maintenance Tips for Syringa Bloomerang Ballet™

 

Plant only in full sun and well-drained soil; lilacs cannot tolerate soggy, wet conditions. 

The rebloom of Bloomerang lilac occurs on the new growth the plant creates after its spring bloom. For the best rebloom, it's vital that the plant grows vigorously during late spring and early summer. Do this by keeping it well-watered and mulched and in plenty of sun (six hours a day at least). If you wish to fertilize it, you may do so in early spring, once the ground has thawed, and again in late spring, after it blooms. 

If you want to prune Bloomerang lilac, do so immediately after its spring bloom. Never cut it back in fall, winter, or early spring - doing so will remove the spring flower buds. It is not necessary to prune Bloomerang lilac in order for it to rebloom. However, giving it a light trim after blooming does remove the developing seed heads (they look like green bananas, and some people don't care for the way they look on the plant), providing a neater look, and encourages more new growth for reblooming. Trimming after blooming will delay the rebloom by a few weeks compared to an untrimmed Bloomerang lilac.

Like nearly all lilacs, Bloomerang lilac actually requires a period of cold weather in order to bloom well. This is why lilacs are not typically suited to warmer climates. However, they are very, very cold tolerant and thrive in climates as cold as USDA zone 3.