It depends on where you live - what zone you are in. There are several different type of hibiscus plants. There are some that are tropical and are evergreen in tropical zones (California, Florida), but are considered annuals (good for 1 season, then dies) in other zones. There are perennial hibiscus plants that emerge from the ground in late spring when the ground warms up, blooms several weeks in the summer and then dies back in the winter. You cut the dead stalks all the way back and they emerge again the next spring from the roots. Check with your local garden centers or local extension office to see what zone you are in and exactly what type of hibiscus you have. They are easy to grow and beautiful - Good Luck!
2007-05-27 19:15:55
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answer #1
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answered by Christy 4
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Hardy hibiscus can be put in the ground. Best to keep them in pots unless you are Zone 8-9. Cuttings can be started in water, better success by dipping them in Rootone and in potting soil. They want full sun. Heat prompts blooming. Water when dry (lift the pot, light = dry, heavy = wet) fertilize every 2 weeks with MiracleGro.
good luck
2007-05-27 23:52:53
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answer #2
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answered by reynwater 7
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i am not entirely sure but my science teacher talked about something like this in highschool long ago about pollinating one plant ( obviously it's the same plant just different colors might of been a hibiscus as well since they are plentiful here in Hawaii) anyways one plant say it was orange pollinate the other plant the red flowers and after they will start growing mixed colors like your plants. i am not totally sure this is true yet alone if it works but i would assume it is possible as they are the same plants just different colors. thats like how humans have sex. same species just different colors/races. a bug could of pollinated them . this is just a guess i am not sure it is true
2016-04-01 00:20:40
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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You can keep it in a pot, in a place with a lot of light but not direct sun light. You can take a little branch and put it in a glass of water, in a few weeks it will develop little roots and it can be then transfered in a pot. Water it only when you see that the ground gets dry, don't put too much water or it will lose its leaves and die. Good luck.
2007-05-27 18:37:39
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answer #4
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answered by imika7 1
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keep it in the pot it comes in or move it to a slightly larger one, water it "everyday", feed fertilizer with a higher middle number once a month, keep it in full sun(more the better), and oh yeah it's tropical too so if the temp. falls below 40 or so degrees.....take it inside! i keep mine in a pot!
2007-05-27 20:28:09
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answer #5
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answered by Robert 4
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