A place for gardeners, foodies and garden inspired artists.

Tag: Plant Page 21 of 28

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

Daylily Pumpkin Moonshine

By Trimmer – 1998

Daylily Pumpkin moonshine

Daylily Pumpkin moonshine

A golden yellow daylily that will stand out from the crowd. Its perfect shape and gorgeous dark red eye zone will make sure of that.  It even shows the eye zone on the lower petals and the throat is an unusual dark orange color.  It is a 22” dormant tetraploid that blooms early with 4 1/2 “, slightly fragrant flowers.

$8.00
Quantity:  

Daylily Primal Scream

By Hanson – 1994

Daylily Primal Scream

Daylily Primal Scream

Primal Scream does just that to your senses when you see it.  The 8” tangerine/orange blooms have a ruffled edge. Depending on the weather, sometimes they open wide and perfect and sometimes they curve back and bend and twist into an unusual form. The plant is large at 34” and it is a dormant tetraploid with huge fans.  It starts blooming mid-season and has a large bud count for one so large, so it keeps cranking out the color, lasting into the very late season. It has won the Stout Silver Medal, the Lambert/Webster Award and the President’s Cup Award in 2013.  If you thought you didn’t like orange daylilies try this one; it will really stand out in your garden.

$12.00

Daylily Prairie Wildfire

By Ellison – 1994

This fellow is a large dormant tetraploid at 24” with big fans.  The velvety cherry red flowers have heavy substance and perfect form in any weather.  The 5” flowers are fragrant and have lemon yellow throats but dark red stamens.  The bud count is very high and branching is good, for an extended show all summer.

$12.00

Daylily Prairie Blue Eyes

By Marsh – 1970

This daylily is a lovely shade of blue violet with blending to a little darker shade just before turning white; and then the golden throat starts. There is also a cream to white midrib and along the edge. The plant is 28” with 5” flowers. A semi-evergreen diploid that is a mid-season bloomer; the blue is really more in the eye-zone and how vivid it is can vary with conditions.

Parentage: (Prairie Hills x Lavender Flight)

$9.00

Daylily Platinum Palette Brave Heart

By DeGroot – 2002

Daylily Braveheart

Daylily Braveheart

The color of this beauty is a dark red raspberry with an even darker black cherry eye zone.  The throat is gold blending to orange and there are pink mid ribs on both the upper and lower petals.  The lower petals are slightly lighter with some streaking.  The scapes are about 25 inches tall with the fragrant flowers being about 4 ½ inches.  It is a dormant diploid mid-season re-bloomer. Be careful not to mix him up with Brave Heart which is a little white one that looks like one of the candies.

$8.00
Quantity:  

Daylily Pixie Parasol

By Hudson – 1955

Daylily Pixie Parasol

Pixie Parasol’ is a dainty miniature that sports masses of 2 ½” apricot flowers on semi-evergreen foliage. She re-blooms multiple times, and is ever so cute with its little green throat, and foliage that is only to 14” high. This “orange sherbet” color looks good enough to eat and you can. The substance is heavy so they are nice on the edge of a salad. This also helps them last into the night and sometimes even a second day.

$10.00

Daylily Pardon Me

By Apps 1982

Daylily Pardon Me

Daylily Pardon Me

18” tall with a 3″ flower.
A true red with a gold throat.
This miniature blooms mid-season and then continues to re-bloom.
It is also nocturnal. This plant looks great in front of a larger daylily that has an eye-zone of the same color. I have it in front of Cherry Candy.
You could give a piece of this one to a garden pal when apologies are necessary.  Dormant, diploid

$7.00

Daylily Pandora’s Box

By Talbott 1980

Daylily Pandora's Box

Daylily Pandora’s Box

30″ tall with a 4″ bloom – zone 4

Early, midseason, re-blooming, extended bloom, slight fragrance.

Near white with a mauve eye zone and a yellow green throat. Also, a “diamond dusting” can be noticed in the right light.

Evergreen, diploid

$7.00

Page 21 of 28

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén