yes, typically roses are grafted, if the rootstock is allowed to grow out you will basically have two different flowers (and different sets of foliage) on the same bush - applies to standard and bush roses.
Same applies to certain grafted fruit trees such as grafted citrus, mango, avocado etc.
Yes, it can have 2-3 different color blooms on the same plant.
the blooms turn green when the plant goes dormant
because they both are different
its a plant that blooms once every 100 years or w.e
Flower colors are random on Moshi Monsters. You will not know the color of any flower until it blooms. If you do not get the color you need, you have to dig up that flower and plant another seed.
A daffodil does not change color during its lifetime. There have been color changes in the genus because of breeders/hybridizers picking certain parent blooms looking for their perfect flower, but the plant's flower cannot change its color from one day to the next.
It's a flowering plant - producing yellow blooms.
Blooms on a green bean plant look like small, pretty flowers.
Pency.
because it blooms and you may get a moshling!
The Rosy-Red Trinity Plant is a perennial that blooms for a decent timespan.
Because the offspring has both the Tall gene and the short gene
Yes iris is a plant. It blooms in late spring but some varieties will also rebloom in fall.