Gardeners adore the hibiscus plant for its vibrant colors, and flower heads the size of a dinner plate. The tricky part is figuring out where to buy your hibiscus. Tropical hibiscus plants are only available from early spring. Later in the season, most nurseries will only stock hardy hibiscus. Hibiscus are widely available but the quality differs between suppliers. Big box stores will have cheaper prices, but less experienced staff to care for the plants. Garden centers, mail-order nurseries, and local nurseries will have better quality plants, a wider variety of tropical and hybrid hibiscus plants, and knowledgeable staff able to assist with plant care advice.
This category includes nurseries with online stores. The upside is you get quality plants grown by knowledgeable gardeners at an affordable price. A mail-order nursery might only ship plants. Not all will be able to supply fertilizers, containers, gardening tools, soil, and bags of mulching material. For all you know, what looks like a mail-order nursery could be a backyard gardener growing hibiscus plants from cuttings, potting it up at the time of order, and shipping it in a one-gallon pot within 8-weeks of you placing the order.
Due diligence is needed with any mail order service. These are usually good for buying quality plants only. What you may miss out on with some nurseries are the savings from shipping all your gardening supplies in one shipment. Nurseries located in the North where climates are colder will only have hardy varieties available later in the season.
Overwintering tropical plants will be too expensive for them. Hibiscus Add a tropical flare to your garden. Get a touch of the tropics delivered straight to your door when you shop Spring Hill's variety of hibiscus plants. Growing best in full sun, these bold, broad-flowered plants can lend an exotic tinge to your perennial planting.
This perennial shrub comes in a wide range of colors, shapes, and degrees of hardiness. Some varieties are even hardy in zone 4, allowing you to bring a tropical flair to even the coldest of regions. Hibiscus are a highly versatile plant as well, making an excellent addition to a perennial garden, cut arrangement or container, a stand-alone planting or even grown as a hedge.
Even butterflies and hummingbirds can't help but be enticed by their exotic flair. No-Risk Guarantee Order with complete confidence. No Risk Guarantee Opens a dialog Gardening resources Questions? Ask Us! Sign up for Newsletter Email. All rights reserved. Email me when this item is available! Oops, there seems to be an error, please re-enter your email address. Once you decide on the right type of hibiscus, read the plant tags to make sure you have the right variety for your needs. Check the plant tag to see how big it grows.
Varieties in the HibisQs, Shades of Summer, and TradeWinds series stay dwarf, only growing a couple of feet tall and wide over the course of the summer.
Picking Hibiscus Plants When shopping for hibiscus, look for plants that have dark green leaves. Too many yellow leaves may be a sign that the plant was stressed. Also look for lots of flower buds developing; hibiscus will often drop flower buds when allowed to dry out too much. While you can prune them, shrub forms can take a while to grow into a more attractive plant. Because hibiscus flower from their new growth, one general rule is the more stems they have, the more blooms they can produce.
The healthiest plants will have firm, white roots that just start to fill the pot. If there are lots of thick roots circling the inside of the pot, the plant is rootbound and will need more frequent watering.
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