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Daylily Copper Summer

By Wild; 1970

Daylily Copper Summer

Daylily Copper Summer

A 2 foot tall plant with large 6 inch flowers; the color on this one is beautiful.  It seems to be blended from copper to coral to apricot; getting lighter towards the yellow throat with stamens of the same color.  This early and mid-season bloomer is a dormant, diploid. It is not your average orange daylily.

$10.00

Daylily Christmas Ribbon

By Stamile – 1991

The large robust plant is the present and the giant 8 to 9” bright Christmas red flowers are the bow. It is classified as UF (unusual form) because the top petals are spatulate and the lower petals are spider like, thus making the flower look star like. The early to mid-season blooming flowers have a bright yellow throat that blends out to the diamond dusted petals, kind of sparkling in the sun. At up to 36”, this dormant tetraploid stands up to summer weather.

Parentage: (VELVET WIDOW X Tetra OPEN HEARTH).

$10.00

Daylily Christmas Present

By Yonski – 2001

Daylily Christmas Present

Daylily Christmas Present

This daylily sports a 5 inch, bright cherry red flower with a chartreuse throat and a bit of a star on the midribs.  It is a dormant tetraploid with a nice light fragrance that blooms mid-season and continues into the late season.  It gets about 2 ½ feet tall.

$8.00

Daylily Chicago Ruby Red

By Marsh – 1977

Daylily Chicago Ruby Red

Daylily Chicago Ruby Red

Another of the beautiful Chicago Reds; Chicago Ruby is a little rounder, fuller and darker than Chicago Apache. The gold throat stands out on this mid-season blooming 5” flower. A semi-evergreen tetraploid; it is a rapid grower.  Be sure to plant it far enough away from your other daylilies so they don’t grow together.

$6.00

Daylily Chicago Apache

By Marsh-Klehm – 1981

Daylily Chicago Apache

Daylily Chicago Apache

This is an eye catching velvet red daylily with a yellow throat that will bloom a little later than most. The 5” flowers on this dormant tetraploid are held atop 30” scapes. The plant will be a little darker and I think a bit nicer in a little shade and will be more claret red in full sun and the white to pink mid rib will show up a bit more.

$6.00

Daylily Cherry Cheeks

By Peck – 1968

Daylily Cherry Cheeks

Daylily Cherry Cheeks

When you don’t want a red daylily but a light pink won’t give you the punch that you want then bright rosy pink Cherry Cheeks is for you. She really has a lot going on with her apricot/yellow throat and lighter pink halo plus cream colored mid ribs and bright spots that show on the lower petals when the flowers open all the way.  Even the under-side is interesting as it is the color of the throat. Each 6” flower is a little different and it sometimes develops streaks of red, pink or yellow. This 30” dormant tetraploid has six inch flowers that bloom heavily in the mid to late season.

$10.00

Daylily Catherine Woodbury

By Childs – 1967

A very feminine light pink 4 ½” flower is very early and has a beautiful fragrance. The warm yellow eye makes it even more elegant. At 32” this old time favorite is a sturdy performer that holds its flowers up where the nose can find them. It is a dormant diploid.

$8.00

Daylily Bonanza

Ferrick 1954

24″ tall with a 4.5″ bloom – Zone 3.

A mid-season, re-blooming classic with a slight fragrance.

It’s gold with a large maroon band and a yellow throat. I keep hot, bright colors like this in my front bed so that they can be seen from the road.

Diploid

$7.00

Daylily Black Friar

By Lester – 1950

Daylily Black Friar

Daylily Black Friar

2.5 feet tall with a 4 inch bloom. This very dark velvety wine red-purple flower is a dormant diploid.  The chartreuse throat provides a bright contrast. This is a historic daylily that can be difficult to find.

$8.00

Daylily Black Eyed Stella

By Roberson (1989)

Daylily Black Eyed Stella

Daylily Black Eyed Stella

This miniature cultivar has gold flowers with a deep orange-red eye-zone and grows to 15 inches tall with a 3 ¼ inch bloom. It has a nocturnal extended blooming habit and reliable re-bloom; it opens in the afternoon and closes the following morning or early afternoon, so it would be great in your moon garden. This daylily was a winner in the landscape category for All-American Daylily In 1994. Created from Stella De Oro, which is the most successful daylily ever, Black Eyed Stella was chosen from over 3000 seedlings. It does very well in extreme cold, but equally well in hot humid areas.

$7.00
Quantity:  

Page 27 of 28

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