
Rose Glorybower. Glossy, dark green leaves to 4 inches long. Stems grow to about four feet tall.

It has green deciduous foliage. Reproduces by both seeds and root suckers, which allow it to spread quickly and widely and form colonies, and is dispersed by humans and birds. The foliage of large, oval leaves, 12 in.
It Has Escaped From Cultivation And Is Naturalized In The Americas.
Stems grow to about four feet tall. Fertilize glorybower in spring and summer to encourage blooms. Hardwood trees shrub or subshrub.
Mulch In Late Winter/Spring After A Light Pruning.
Check out our rose glorybower selection for the very best in unique or custom, handmade pieces from our shops. Grabbing the attention, they attract butterflies and other pollinators. The glorybower is an abundantly flowering plant with elegant hanging white clusters of flowers which does very well in europe as a houseplant.
Reproduces By Both Seeds And Root Suckers, Which Allow It To Spread Quickly And Widely And Form Colonies, And Is Dispersed By Humans And Birds.
This map is incomplete and is based only on current site and county level reports made by experts and records obtained from usda plants database. The berries of harlequin glorybower provide a tasty snack for wildlife, including this pigeon in nw york's high line park. While most varieties tolerate shade fairly well, they don't bloom as much.
They Have Simple, Broad Leaves.
The oval leaves do not develop any appreciable fall color. What you notice immediately are the shiny green leaves combined with the pure white flowers. Rose glorybower clerodendrum bungei steud.
Prized For Its Lovely Flowers And Brightly Colored Fruit, Clerodendrum Trichotomum (Harlequin Glorybower) Is A Deciduous Large Shrub Or Small Tree Of Great Ornamental Interest.
Provider any provider calphotos nmnh collection flickr group usda plants images. Rose glorybower in an isolated part of the county the weedy edge of an upland woods gave way to something new, something definitely not part of the local natural flora, obviously an ornamental plant escaped from cultivation or surviving as a relict where once a house stood, though now there was nothing but woods. Included in the european invasive plants database and the global compendium of weeds.