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Daylily Seedling October Ruby

By L. Grant 2004

This is a seedling of Vesuvian. It is not a registered name.

A robust plant with large 6″ perfectly shaped red flowers with heavy substance. The plant is long blooming and also one of the latest blooming in my garden. Fat fans produce sturdy, well branched scapes that are about 24″ tall.

Bud set is heavy and they always open without problems even in cold weather.

This show stopper is fire engine red with a chartreuse throat. A winner! Wish I knew who the pollen parent was.

$8.00

Daylily Little Rusty

Seedling

15″ ht. flowers 2.5″ – zone 3
Rusty orange with a gold throat.  This one can vary on the same plant.  Some are solid orange and some are slightly bicolored with gold hues on the lower petals.
This little beauty came in a group of seedlings that were billed as “Sisters of Stella”. It is not a registered variety. This daylily was a selection from the breeding program for the famous Stella De Oro, which was not registered. This is a beautiful little mini that would be at home in any collection. It has many of the same attributes as its sister “Stella”. It is a non-stop bloomer, increases rapidly and is 100% reliable.
Early midseason, extended bloom, re-bloomer
dormant, diploid

$8.00
Quantity:  

Daylily Sandra Elizabeth

Stevens – 1983

The beauty of Sandra Elizabeth is that it is very late…a daylily blooming when all of the others are done. It is yellow but is fairly ruffled.  Her 6” flowers are held atop 28” scapes. She is a dormant tetraploid and so really hardy and the flowers open even when it is cold.

$12.00

Daylilly Sammy Russell

SORRY, WE NO LONGER HAVE THIS PLANT.

By Russell – 1951

Daylily Sammy Russell

Daylily Sammy Russell

This heirloom daylily is a late blooming dormant diploid. It is brick red with a gold throat that extends out, star-like, onto the mid-ribs. Give this fast grower some space or it will grow into the one you planted next to it.  Though not a true spider the 4 inch flowers do have a spidery form with thin petals. The plant stands about 2 ½ feet tall.

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Daylily Salieri

By Moldovan 1990

Daylily Salieri

Daylily Salieri

30″ ht.5″ flowers – zone 3
Very dark purple with a darker eye zone.
Dormant, tetraploid
Early with extended bloom.
Not the darkest of the darks, but one of the most reliable bloomers.

$8.00

Daylily Sail On

SORRY WE NO LONGER HAVE THIS PLANT.

By Claar-Parry – 1964

Daylily Sail On

Daylily Sail On

This daylily looks “spider like” but the petals are not long enough to truly be classified as a spider. The flower opens and the narrow petals curl back (see picture). This dormant diploid is red with a large gold throat and mid-ribs. He is a mid-season extended bloomer that is 34” tall with a 5” flower.

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Daylily Rustic Dream

By Flanders – 1999

Daylily Rustic Dream

Daylily Rustic Dream

Rustic dream is one of those that is difficult to describe. It is sort of an orangy-rusty-rose.  From the throat it starts green then blends to gold and then this “rustic” color.  It is 26 inches tall with a 6.5 inch bloom that starts mid-season and then re-blooms. It is an evergreen, tetraploid with 32 buds on 3 branches. The parentage is (Wildfire Tango × Enchanted Elegance).

$8.00
Quantity:  

Daylily Red Ribbons

By Lenington – 1964

Daylily Red Ribbons

Daylily Red Ribbons

These deep ruby red spiders do look like ribbons at 8” with a ratio of 4.7:1. They are super-tall.   Big long buds held on 40” stems.  Though they are an evergreen diploid they do pretty well here in Wisconsin. The star like, warm gold center really shines. The petals curl back nicely and sometimes the gold extends down the mid-rib or as a thin line along the edges.

$10.00
Quantity:  

Daylily Ralph Henry

By Hall – 1964

Daylily Ralph Henry

Daylily Ralph Henry

A peachy orange daylily with a raised cream mid-rib and cream around the edge of the lower petals. The dormant diploid plant is 20” with 5” blooms.  This is not the same as “Siloam Ralph Henry”. It is just “Ralph Henry”. Yes, there are 2 of them and the Siloam daylily of the same name is very popular while this one is rare.

$6.00

Daylily Purple De Oro

By Degroot – 2000

Daylily Purple De Oro

Daylily Purple De Oro

The ‘de Oro’ in the name makes you think this will be a good performer and it does bloom throughout the season.  A dormant diploid; it will grow as quickly as your Stellas. With blooms only 3” it could be called a miniature daylily, but the mass of plum purple with yellow throats does not seem little. There is some streaking in the veins and the edges are slightly ruffled. A compact plant at only 20”…enjoy.

$5.00

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