Daylilies
putting on
quite a show
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Gardeners,
get your checkbooks out and start shopping for daylilies.
Ideal planting time was a couple months ago, but daylilies
are blooming everywhere now, and this will aid you in making
your selections.
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Spiderman
is a hit at the theater box office with the movie
and is a hit in the garden with the bright red
blooms of the Spiderman daylily.
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I'll
confess that in the past, I have looked at daylilies with
tunnel vision. I have only wanted those that give the best
landscape impact for massing as a bedding plant. For this
type of use, one has to admit that Stella d Oro is No.
1.
There
are thousands of spectacular daylilies for sale, some even
approaching the price of my first car. But there is nothing
prettier than a daylily garden that looks like a changing
kaleidoscope of color for weeks.
There
are a lot of great daylilies, some which bloom early, some
mid-season and some bloom late. Some even have repeat
blooms. Stella is the first and probably the last blooming
in the landscape. But it is time to branch out or increase
the palette, so to speak.
I just
had the opportunity to visit with a local gardener who had
the prettiest red one I had ever seen. I asked the name and
it surprised me as it is as hot as today's news. The name
was Spiderman, and growing next to it was a giant yellow
daylily called Spider Web.
If you
haven't tried daylilies because the flowers only last a day,
consider that each scape or flower stalk has many buds and
these open in a series. This gives you beauty not only days,
but weeks or even months if they repeat.
Daylilies
require at least six hours of direct sunlight each day for
best performance. You get the best results from raised beds
that are rich in organic matter. Almost every problem call I
get on daylilies, other than a few insect problems,
originate with daylilies planted in soggy soil.
Be sure
to add a good layer of mulch to hold moisture, keep the soil
cool and to prevent weeds. I am a pine straw nut for mulch,
but I have to admit that a layer of pine bark mulch around a
daylily loaded with blooms is a wonderful sight.
Daylilies
are best planted in the early spring or fall, although
container-grown plants can be planted throughout the growing
season with outstanding success. This means you can shop now
while they are blooming and pick the color and form that is
most appealing to you.
To keep
the plant's energy directed into flower production, keep
seed pods picked off and feed with a complete and balanced
fertilizer every four to six weeks.
Daylilies
work well in special gardens by themselves or as part of the
perennial border where they can be combined with flowers
like purple coneflowers and black-eyed Susans.
Try
growing yellow to gold selections to the rear of a bed with
Purple Wave petunias planted in front. Or plant Purple Heart
in front and you will have a bed that will return year after
year in much of the state. My favorite way to use them is
planted in drifts with perennial salvia like Victoria Blue
or Indigo Spires.
Daylilies
look at home when combined in beds with ornamental grasses
like Fountain or Maiden Grass, and they are breathtaking
when planted in front of evergreen shrubs like hollies or
junipers.
When
shopping, you may feel like some daylilies are a little
pricey, but to me, they are some of the "sirloin strips" of
the plant world. What is extra special is that these are
perennials and before too long, you will be dividing it and
placing them in more parts of the landscape. Visit you local
garden center or daylily farm now.
-30-
Released:
June 17, 2002
Contact: Norman
Winter
(601) 857-2284 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
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