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A Lady Baltimore Pink Hibiscus.
Discover how to grow perennial hibiscus flowers with their giant, tropical blooms
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Types
Scarlet Swamp Hibiscus (Hibiscus coccineus): This plant, also known as Texas Star, has 5-petaled, brilliant-red flowers. It grows to a height of 7 feet each growing season, dies back to the ground every winter, and resprouts in spring.
Rose Mallow (H. moscheutos): This is the classic dinner-plate hibiscus due to the large size of its flowers. These large, fast-growing plants bloom from August to October, and each plant may flaunt several 10- to 12-inch-wide flowers at once. A few of the many popular cultivars are:
- ‘Anne Arundel’ has pink flowers, 9 inches in diameter, on plants 5 feet tall.
- ‘Kopper King’ has light pink to white flowers with a burgundy center, 12 inches in diameter, with coppery red deeply cut leaves.
- ‘Lady Baltimore’ is a popular old variety with pink flowers and red centers on 5-foot-tall plants.
- ‘Lord Baltimore’ is another old variety with red flowers on 5-foot-tall plants.
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There are several reasons why a potted hibiscus might not be flowering. First, the plant needs to be in full Sun, no shade. Also, container plants need some supplemental fertilizer (food) because watering a container plant washes out nutrients. But do NOT overfertilize with nitrogen (which causes lush leafy foliage but at the expense of blooms).
Yes. Leave the flowers to die back. After the flowers are spent for the season, a brown pod will form at the end of the stem in the same place. The seed pod is quite large and obvious. When it starts to brown and break open at one end, collect the small brown seeds. Make sure to place them in a plastic baggie and seal it.
Hi Glenda, If you're looking for yellow perennials, there are hundreds of choices. Examples of flowers that come in yellow: Rudbeckia Goldsturm, Baptisia, and Coreopsis. We would suggest you Google a garden nursery to browse which plants fit your growing zone! Here is an example: www.bluestoneperennials.com


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