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This year I planted from seeds several Hibiscus or Rose Mallow varieties. They came up easily and grew fine until one night the deer ate their tops off. I sprayed deer repellent on the remaining parts of the plants, stopping the nasty deer grazing. The plants are now doing well, sending gorgeous saucer size blooms one after the other.
Finally, here are some of them together.
Zoe Glover said:
Thanks for sharing the photos. You take excellent photos!!!
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Untraveled Routes said:
I wish I had even one of these beautiful flowers in my garden…
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Zoe Glover said:
Rose Mallow is easy to grow but it needs plenty of sun and water.
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RV John said:
Well to spite the deer you got some beauties raise!
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photobyjohnbo said:
Beautiful flowers. Our problem is rabbits. we don’t have a large garden in our condo “yard”, but we’ve been trying varieties that rabbits don’t like to eat. >grin<
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neihtn2012 said:
Thanks John! The deer repellent I use also deters rabbits.
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Julie@frogpondfarm said:
I suspect I have hibiscus envy 🙂 .. these are just marvellous. Glad you managed to save them
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you Julie! You will have spring and summer soon, and hibiscus flowers perhaps?
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bayphotosbydonna said:
Beautiful images, Hien. I love this flower, gives the feeling of the tropics or beach!
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neihtn2012 said:
You are right, Donna! A touch of the tropics in a temperate zone.
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MANSOOR said:
wow, such lovely flowers… love it… good work you done
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you. Glad you like the photos!
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Lignum Draco said:
Lovely flowers. I’m intrigued to know what deer repellant is. Is it an odour that deters them?
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neihtn2012 said:
It’s a liquid concoction widely sold here. It smells pretty bad, for me anyway, and contains things like garlic and “putrescent egg solids”. I have to use it otherwise there would be no garden left. Building a fence is an alternative but that would be too expensive and ruin the view.
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Mary said:
Gorgeous Hien, wow ~ the size and brilliance in color, yet delicate in nature. Just love them.
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you Mary! Glad you like these flowers.
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T Ibara Photo said:
They are gorgeous flowers! I can imagine why they might look appetizing to the deer 😀 Our neighbours grow these blossoms too – it’s lovely to see them each morning.
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neihtn2012 said:
They look gorgeous indeed, every time I pass by them. I thought they were gone after the deer ate almost half of each plant, but they made a come back and none were lost.
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katelon said:
Pretty photos and flowers. I don’t know if this variety is edible but the Latino community make a wonderful drink with dried Hibiscus flowers and sugar or honey, called “Jamaica”. It is yummy. The deer repellent might make it toxic though.
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you Katelon! “Jamaica” sounds yummy indeed!
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blondie63 said:
Wow, elegant vibrant flowers
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you!
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Tiny said:
Hibiscus is one of my favorite flowers. So many beautiful colors and variations. Your shots are wonderful!
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you very much Helen!
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Streets of Nuremberg said:
Beautiful photos of flowers my wife loves s much! Have a great weekend, Hien! Marcus
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you, and a nice weekend to you too!
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dvukhac said:
Beautiful!!
Sent from my iPhone
>
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you!
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Eliza Waters said:
They’re beautiful! A great success!
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you very much Eliza!
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milfordstreet said:
These are beautiful. I tried taking some photo of hummingbirds coming to the feeder this morning. It’s not so easy. Having tried it makes the recent images that you shared really amazing in terms of your technical skill. How you caught some in midflight is absolutely incredible. Cheers!
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you Chris! Some tips that you may find useful: use a good tripod; use the longest telephoto lens that you have; aim your camera on the feeder and focus on it so that you don’t have to refocus too much when the bird shows up; wait until they show up and click away when they do; bump up your ISO so that you can shoot at least at 1/320 sec or even faster; use f8 or whatever will produce a sharp image on your camera.
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milfordstreet said:
Thanks for the great ideas. I’ll try them. A bit of patience seems in order also. Cheers
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quietsolopursuits said:
I didn’t know that you could grow these from seeds, and I didn’t know that there was a deer repellent that worked. I’m glad that everything worked as it should because these are stunning!
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neihtn2012 said:
Thank you Jerry! The deer repellent works, but you have to spray the plants again after a heavy rain. Even then, they came back to chomp off the top of several Cosmos plants that I had sprayed.
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dweezer19 said:
Hibiscus are such works of art.
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neihtn2012 said:
Glad you like them Cheryl!
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Irene said:
How I love hibiscus but have failed at growing them in my garden. They seem to grow beautifully in other’s yard and even wild along the trails. As soon as I plant them, they die. 😜
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neihtn2012 said:
You are sure the deer did not eat them?
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Irene said:
No, I am not sure. I have seen deer around our house but didn’t know they enjoyed hibiscus. Maybe it is not all my fault. Thanks for my out on this one. 😉
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