Evan as a kid I recall enjoying the daylilies that grew along the roadsides in the northeast. I had a growing daylily bed when we lived in Colorado, and years before that I tried to grow some on our property in NC, but they were simply yummy dessert for the deer.
I have a partially sunny bank in my garden that lost most of the plantings on it last winter. I decided to try some lilies. I looked online for local farms, but didn't see much that had much inventory. So I looked further afield. I stumbled on the website for Oakes Daylilies. I called and chatted about what type of lily might thrive in central Florida. The gal on the phone indicated that they have dormant and evergreen, or semi-evergreen varieties and anything that doesn't require a period of dormancy would grow in our area.
I took a leap of faith and ordered some plants. I ordered three of each of the following:
All Fired Up
Touched by Midas
Jungle Princess
I was also given 1 bonus lily. I don't know what it will be....and I'm thinking they don't either!
The lilies came in a box with some air holes.
thecontemplativecat here. Day lilies are so beautiful. They grow easily and propagate on their own, my type of flower!
ReplyDeleteThat was my experience in Colorado. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that they enjoy the hot, humid summers, and sometimes icky, cold winters we experience here.
DeleteWishing you and those varieties of day lilies well! We can grow orange day lilies but any others we've planted have been eaten by unknown wild things.
ReplyDeleteHugs!
I have seen squirrels nibble on the buds, and deer will eat them if the pickings are slim elsewhere in the yard!
DeleteI have what seems like millions of daylilies. They sprout up in multitudes. They seem to thrive in our lousy soil.
ReplyDeleteOh! I can't wait to see how well they do!
ReplyDelete