This plant was also called a marsh mallow because the grew in wet areas. The roots were spongy and white, and if sweetened they were used as a confection, the botanical ancestor of marshmellows, a purely sugar confection.
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in The Biology Files
A plant pundit comments on plants, the foibles and fun of academic life, and other things of interest.
Friday Fabulous Flower - Big
If your perennial garden doesn't have one of these, it should. The flowers aren't just big, they are huge. And it is almost a carefree plant. It only suffers from being tasty to Japanese beetles. This cultivar is related to one of the rose mallows, a species of Hibiscus, but TPP doesn't know which one, perhaps H. moscheutos. This is the one of the biggest flowers in our garden in terms of diameter, only surpassed by one of the big-leafed magnolias (back a few FFF's ago). So that flower is about 8 " in diameter, pretty gaudy. The cultivars come in a range of colors from white to dark red. All have a center target of darker red. It also flowers in mid to late summer.
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