Anonymous wrote:Huh, we have Rose of Sharon in our yard and it's never been a problem. Looks lovely once it blooms, and it handles the weather well (it was planted by previous owners and has survived our really cold as well as mild winters). Every so often extra shoots appear, but they're easy to prune back.
Anonymous wrote:Huh, we have Rose of Sharon in our yard and it's never been a problem. Looks lovely once it blooms, and it handles the weather well (it was planted by previous owners and has survived our really cold as well as mild winters). Every so often extra shoots appear, but they're easy to prune back.
Anonymous wrote:I have a hibiscus that has been indoors for at least a year. It is fine but never flowered. Can I move it outside now, or will the sudden extreme heat and sunlight be too much for it?
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people we know who grow them keep them in pots outside in the summer and bring them indoors for the winter.
Anonymous wrote:I have a hardy hibiscus planted outside that comes up every year (then it dies off/gets cut back in the fall).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've seen HUGE dinner plate sized hibiscus in NW DC. What variety are these? They are beautiful.
It's native hibiscus, also known as swamp mallow. You can grow them from seed, it will take a season or two to get blooms.
Anonymous wrote:I have a hibiscus that has been indoors for at least a year. It is fine but never flowered. Can I move it outside now, or will the sudden extreme heat and sunlight be too much for it?
Anonymous wrote:I've seen HUGE dinner plate sized hibiscus in NW DC. What variety are these? They are beautiful.
Anonymous wrote:I've seen HUGE dinner plate sized hibiscus in NW DC. What variety are these? They are beautiful.
Anonymous wrote:Did you know that hibiscus flowers are like chocolate to sloths? I just happened to learn that this morning while showing a video on YouTube to my children of baby sloths being given a bath. (After their baths, the caretakers hang them on a set of monkey bars to "drip dry." Too cute.)
Now back to our regularly scheduled programming. . .
Anonymous wrote:You're a nursery employee and you don't know to tell OP to simply buy a variety that is hardy in zone 7 (the local zone)? OP such varieties can be bought online as 2 year old plant. Plant them in a south facing spot close to your home to give it warm. Mulch lightly before the first frost next winter.Anonymous wrote:Nursery employee here in DMV.
Buy and plant in a pot that you intend to throw out on October 1 or move indoors to a sunny spot. It won't flower inside (unless your house is 80+degrees every day) but it will survive. Then you can bring outdoors next June.