On Oct 30, 4:28 pm, HettieŽ wrote:
Jim wrote:
http://personalpages.bellsouth.net/t...rate-Rose.html
about 3 years ago a friend gave us a dead looking stick and
told us if we planted the stick in the ground and watered it
once a day for two weeks we'd get a Confederate Rose bush.
I decided to play along thinking there would be some great
future laughs concerning how I was tricked into planting a
dead looking stick.
http://personalpages.bellsouth.net/t...rate-Rose.html
well, the friend was not playing a joke. now I get to enjoy
taking cuttings from this bush and telling other friends how
if you plant this dead looking stick in the ground you'll get
a Confederate Rose bush.
been kind of neat watching this bush being propagated into
the yards of friends.
That "rose" has palmate leaves which I have never seen on a rose before.
Usually they are compound. The blooms and buds sure look like roses.
Does anyone know its botanical name or another common name for it? I
doubt it would be cold hardy in my zone. I would like to see if there
is anything like it on helpmefind.com.
The only other rose I saw with very unusual leaves was what some thought
might be an alba; instead of the usual five of 7 leaflets on one stem,
it had several more pairs than that.
I have just learned that roses may root from "sticks" if you put them in
the ground when they are dormant. So when you say "stick", I assume
that there are no leaves and that it was dormant when you put it in the
ground. It must root easily; sometimes it helps to use rooting powder,
but I guess them thar Confederate roses root like Forsythia.
You are correct. it isn't a rose at all, but is in the mallow family.
It is Hibiscus mutabilis.
Emilie