By Sellers – 1978
White Temptation’ is a semi-evergreen diploid with sturdy scapes bearing large, creamy-white flowers. The 5” flowers have bright green throats and they open late in the day making them nocturnal…perfect for the moon garden.
$9.00
By Yancey – 1979
This is a
stunning velvety, Christmas red flower that is 6 ½ inches, with a very large lemon yellow throat and eye zone. The flowers are triangle shaped and the bright yellow shows up on the lower petals as well. The plant is 28” and a semi-evergreen diploid that blooms mid to late season.
Parentage: (((seedling × Prairie Warrior) × (Stephen Fleishel × (seedling × Cherry Festival)))
$10.00
By Wild/Wadekamper – unregistered
A blend of light pink, melon and gold with a full wide form and very ruffled petals; this beauty is 30″ tall. The 6” blooms have very wide round top petals and narrower lower petals which are equally ruffled. The bloom season is mid to late. I cannot find documentation, but it behaves like a dormant tetraploid.
By Matel 2010
Pod parent is Super Double Delight By McFarland 1978. Pollen parent is unknown.
30″ ht. 4″ flower
Golden yellow double
Fragrant, mid-season bloomer; semi evergreen, diploid
By Munson 1981
A mid/late season bloomer this dormant tetraploid is 24” tall with 5” blooms. He has a ruby self with a gold throat. It’s not just any old red however. There is a purple halo and a purple sheen over the plant that is difficult to pick up with a camera sometimes even seeming to have purple streaks.
$7.00
By Stamile – 1989
Strawberry Candy is peachy-pink with a rose eye-zone and a gold throat. The ruffled pie crust edge is also rose in color. It is 26 inches tall and the blossoms are 4 ½ inches. The blooms start early, mid-season and then it just keeps going. It is a semi-evergreen tetraploid and here is the parentage (Panache × Tet. Siloam Virginia Henson). This has been the second most popular daylily to Stella de Oro for a long time. Its reliability and foliage that does not fade, even in drought, helped it become the Winner of numerous awards including the Stout Medal, daylily’s highest award.
$10.00
By McRae – 1992
Hmmm…how to describe “Star of Fantasy”; it has a large yellow star in the center that is the throat. The star effect continues as bright white mid-ribs extend out into a triangle shaped plum eye-zone. Then the rose/violet spidery petals stretch out, again in a triangle shape. The top petals are much larger than the lower petals, which have some lilac at the ends but are mostly reflections of the yellow cream throat. This dormant diploid is fairly tall at 30” and the 8 ½” fragrant spider flowers seem to hang right at nose height. Petal length to width is 4 1/2.0:1
Parentage: seedling X snickerdoodle.
$12.00
By Lenington – 1969
This near white is actually the shade of really pale yellow that really stands out in the moon garden, and because they are fairly tall at 30”, with 5 ½” flowers, they look like glowing orbs in the twilight. They are mid-season bloomers extending well into the late season. This semi-evergreen diploid also has fragrance.
Parentage: seedling x white formal.
$10.00Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén