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Old 23-06-2004, 03:04 AM
madgardener
 
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Default Rose of Sharon or Althea's


"Watcher Mom" wrote in message
om...
I took three rose of sharon plants and planted them together in the
same hole about three years ago. One is white, one pink and one
lavender..... I have braided them together and looks like one tree.
I keep the bottom leaves cut off and it has turned out very
interesting. When it blooms it is really neat. Ours haven't bloomed
here yet but I think it is going to be even prettier this year than
last year.
Susie :-))


that does sound neat! I bet the flowering display is georgous. Mine are
blooming only because of the heat we've been getting right now. I've tried
this with lilac's but they're resisting the transplant at the moment. I
might have to plug them in with my older lilac, but haven't quite decided.

Have your daylilies started blooming yet?

I have quite a show of colors at the moment. I need to get more of a grip
on the chaos of my gardens as the growth and foliage is running rampant at
the moment. g

madgardener


"madgardener" wrote in message

...
I have two kinds of Rose of Sharon's, or Althea's. One variety is double

and
the other is the single, more hibiscus type of flower. I planted the
doubles together, butt to butt. The lavendar ones aren't impressive, but

the
double pink one with the bare hint of red maroon is very nice. Now I

wish I
had gotten the darker pink one instead of the soft purple.

The other more hibiscus flowered variety are also planted in two's and

cheek
to cheek in one bed under the black walnut tree. One was a deep, almost
Pepto Bismol pink with a deep red maroon eye. The other is a white with

the
same color eye. They compliment each other very well. I got one right.

And now they're blooming. I absolutely fall in love with some flowers

and
last year when I saw those deep, different pink blossoms with the dark

eye
literally shouting at me from the rear of the nursery, I knew I had to

have
one of them. It took me a few weeks to nab one, they kept flying off

the
tables g grabbed up by gardeners like myself who wanted different.

Now I have decided to take cuttings next year, since this year's attempt

of
cuttings was foiled by the slicing of both clumps of young bushes by the

17
year cicada.

Another experiment in progress is the new addition of a hydrangea along

side
of the established Blue Lace Cap varigated one. I planted Endless Summer
under her protective branches, and on the other side I tucked a rosy

purple
flowered variety of lacecap under the other sides of the varigated one.
That had no tag other than "variety of hydrangea" so it's a crap shoot.

(pics are on alt.binaries.gardens)

I just felt like sharing. Thanks for the time.
madgardener off work this week, up on the ridge, back in Fairy Holler

where
the nourishing summer rains are gently falling every day, overlooking a
misty, cloudy English Mountain in Eastern Tennessee, zone 7, Sunset zone

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