posted
Its pretty hard to tell for sure, due to the wilted condition, but to me this looks like a hunk of Coleus that hasn't had enough light to bring out its vivid colors...
posted
Just observing I don't think so. The leaves on the first one LOOK thicker and have smaller leaves????? Catlover
* * * * Plants: 7129 | From: California | Registered: Mar 2003
| Seeded: 68.66.244.106
Jiffymouse
guest
posted
Karen you are right. Bill, I have a coleus cutting that is growing nicely. But the cutting in the photo has a growth habit more like a baby's tears. bushy with trailing pieces "falling" out of the pot. the leaves are fleshier than either, and the stem is thicker than a baby's tears, but not as thick as a coleus. And it wasn't really wilted, but rather not happy about being put on the scanner! Thanks for the help!!
Seeded: 206.220.183.10
For some reason I feel he knows what all these plants are and it is a quiz for "US" here on the forum. Man Bill we might actually have to use our brains for once. Bad enough when WE have a mystery plant and get frustrated trying to figure it out, now we have to worry about yours. J/K I at least like the challenge! Now you can tell us what it really is....????????? Catlover
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Plants: 7129 | From: California | Registered: Mar 2003
| Seeded: 68.66.244.106
posted
It's not my cutting, nor is it a test (hmmmmmmm...... maybe I should test you with a few closeups...) I still think it's a Coleus, but I've been wrong on a lot of these already. Hopefully, we will get a chance to see it again after it roots and starts to grow!
* * * * Plants: 11227 | From: Cedar Hill Washington | Registered: Aug 2002
| Seeded: 66.248.99.203
posted
A trait that it looks like it has is..... it's able to root anywhere's along it's stem. Look at the stem on the bottom, it has roots not only near the nodes, but along the stem in between......... Just an observation???? Weezie And it looks to me like some kind of mum????
* * * * Weezie
Don't forget to be kind to strangers. For some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it. - Bible - Hebrews 13:2
posted
Weezie, Not a mum, no dead heads or evidence of dead heads on the mother plant. no evidence of any kind of bloom at all...
Seeded: 206.220.183.10
posted
I'm probably wrong, but even so, that cutting looks to me like a button mum, although the cane doesn't look woody enough. Any more info on that cutting besides the pic? My other guess would be geranium, but what do I know? Plants: 74 | From: Cougar, Washington | Registered: Jul 2003
| Seeded: 204.245.232.247
posted
The underside of the leaves are purple and the tops start out green at the center, spread to a purplish shade, then finish up green at the edges.
The plant doesn't have the tale-tale odor of a geranium. And no, it isn't woody enough for either a mum or geranium.
posted
Need to post this in a section where Will Creed will see it! Don't know if he looks under this section of the forum. I'm in agreement about not being a geranium. Catlover
* * * * Plants: 7129 | From: California | Registered: Mar 2003
| Seeded: 68.66.244.106
posted
Definitely not a geranium. It does look something like a plant that I have growing in the shade. I don't recall the name of it right now but the leaves look very much like these although I am not sure if they are purple underneath.
posted
Store had 2 pots of it without any kind of id information or even a price tag... picked up the cutting off the table. is growing quite well in it's water bottle...
Seeded: 206.220.183.10
posted
So it's a house plant or outside? Was the store a nursery or what kind of store was it?
I was thinking out door plants originally??
I would agree with Karen to post it in the houseplant section...... For Will Creed to see Or even Alan K. Hart, he seems to have an eye for these plants!!! Weezie
* * * * Weezie
Don't forget to be kind to strangers. For some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it. - Bible - Hebrews 13:2
posted
Could it be Lamb's Quarters (CHENOPODIUM album)? The mature leaves are triangle shaped, some have smoooth edges, others are lobed or wavy edged, topside are dull green and underside are purple.
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Amor est vitae essentia. Love is the essence of life. Plants: 932 | From: Northern California, Zone 9b | Registered: Jul 2003
| Seeded: 198.81.26.49
Jiffymouse
guest
posted
Checked out Lamb's quarters and that's not it.
Seeded: 206.220.183.9
* * * * Plants: 7129 | From: California | Registered: Mar 2003
| Seeded: 68.66.244.106
Jiffymouse
guest
posted
Ok, I have to bring this back to the top... Weezie, Hope you are feeling better, sorry I didn't answer your questions about the plant before now. the store was the wonderful wally world... the pots were with a mix of house and landscape plants. No id, no info, no one to ask... so, the good news is the cutting is doing well in my office, I just don't know what it is!! If all else fails, we will find out as it grows!!
Seeded: 12.94.114.124
posted
Jiffy, Ya know with the way the roots looked along the stem, it looks like a plant that is pretty hardy. I had been interested in plants that do that since the beginning of summer when I was potting up some plants, I was trying to give my son and tenants son a project to do to keep them busy, and we went shopping and let them pick out plants to pot up in there tree house that they share. So when we got home they wanted to play more than plant and so you know who got to finish up the job. But in the plants that they bought was an argeratum (Kyle loves the flower) the plant had fallen over and all up and down the stem, there were roots, I never knew that about this plant. I just was reading that the lillies are another plant that is able to do that...I'm not sure about day lillies, I believe that it was the Orientals, Trumpets, Orienpets, Asian ones............ Just thought I'd mention that. I'd be very interested to know what the plant is when you find out.
I would post that picture in the house plants and see if Will can give it a guess,or Alankhart or Barb, or Nikkal or Carol or Bess or maybe even the Plant Doctor or the list goes on and on!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Whaddya think?????
Weezie
* * * * Weezie
Don't forget to be kind to strangers. For some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it. - Bible - Hebrews 13:2
posted
The growth habit is similar to a coleus. However, coleus' have square stems and this cutting appears to have round stems in the photo.
My guess is that it may be in the Plectranthus genus, of which the Swedish ivy is a member, along with 350 others.
It might also be a weed!
Seeded: 24.239.134.109
Jiffymouse
guest
posted
Well, Will gets the prize with Bill a close runner up!! Based on the research I did on this plant, using Will's suggested Plectranthus genus, and it does belong to that group. It isn't swedish ivy (or what we used to call "creeping Charlie" but it is a cousin. And Bill, the coleus was listed on several sites as being a cousin too! After it grows, I will send a better picture, but just wanted to let you know, Will got it!!
Seeded: 206.220.183.10
posted
This is a picture of the plant I have growing in my garden that I thought it resembled. Is this plant in the same family as the original plant? I don't recall the name of the plant I have growing in my garden but I know that I bought it because it would do well in the shade.
posted
The last picture you posted is COLUMBINES!!! I have a ga~zillion of them.... and the white lines are leaf miners and I get cabbage worms on mine that eat them alive!!! Weezie
* * * * Weezie
Don't forget to be kind to strangers. For some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it. - Bible - Hebrews 13:2
posted
OOH~OOH!!! Mine are purple. Doubles on the inside. They were my grannies....... I have dark, medium and light pink. one little tiny dwarf purple and white. I had yellow, but it didn't like me.... I'll have to send you some..... Weezie
* * * * Weezie
Don't forget to be kind to strangers. For some who have done this have entertained angels without realizing it. - Bible - Hebrews 13:2
posted
luvgardening, I'm not sure, as I have so many of the plants and by the time those catapillars are devouring the leaves, there's the cirles and pathes through them, so the catapillars eat the evidence and I'm content with the seed pods I get as there is 1 million seeds it seems like, and I have to keep finding places or good homes for them, as you're not suppose to intermix the colors or varieties as they interbreed as I understand it. So, I've really never done much with them myself. Supposedly you can clip off the offending leaf or leaves and that helps take care of it, but I loose half the plant over night so I leave what is left of those leaves so they can have some photosynthesis. (when the cabbage worms first appear, then I start squeezing them, I am a no~chemical type) I enjoy my columbines, in the spring, they are lovely and bring back memories of my grannie, the purple ones I have were her's originally.