By Stamile 1980
Wineberry is a favorite member of the “candy” series. It is a slightly fragrant, dormant tetraploid that is a mid-season rebloomer. The 4.5 inch bright pink flowers have a dark purple/magenta eye-zone. They seem to get darker as they age. She has won the Stout Silver Medal, L. Ernest Plouf Award and an AHS Award of Merit.
Tag: Plant Page 8 of 28
By Stamile 1993
Another beauty in the “Candy” series; this slightly fragrant dormant tetraploid starts early and then reblooms. The 4.5 inch blooms seem to be a different color at different times in the season. A google image search will verify this. Sometimes the blooms are cream/pink and sometimes more pale yellow. These pictures are from the same plant. The eye-zone is always a bright raspberry red hence the name. She is the winner of a L. Ernest Plouf Award.
By Salter 1988
She is the cutest of the cute. Truly a miniature at only a foot tall, with blooms that are less than 2″; the flowers are rose with a burgundy eye, green throat and a thin gold ruffled edge. This mid-season rebloomer is a semi evergreen diploid.
Parentage: (Enchanter’s Spell × sdlg)
$10.00
By Lankart 1979
This really is the true color of this darling miniature daylily. It is bright fuchsia and perfectly round and ruffled. The plant is truly miniature at only a foot tall, but for its size the flowers are fairly big at 3 inches. She is a semi-evergreen diploid and blooms early to mid-season.
By Wilson 1983
A spider daylily that looks a little different each time it opens, because of the way it twists and curls. This semi-evergreen diploid holds 6 inch flowers on top of tall 3 foot scapes. The flower has a spider ratio of 4.4:1 and the color is difficult to explain starting from the center there is a wide yellow throat and the smaller petals are this same color. The large upper petals are slightly wider and gradually fade from apricot to orange to dark red.
Parentage: (Sdlg. X FERRIS WHEEL)
$9.00
By Apps 1991
Final Touch is a late blooming (get it? Final Touch?), slightly fragrant dormant diploid. It is a bi-colored pink panther pink with the lower petals being lighter pink and it has a bright gold throat. It is winner of the Eugene S. Foster Award. Many years it re-blooms until frost.
$10.00
By Webster 1986
This rich red beauty has a bright yellow throat changing to green deep inside, and the stamens are also bright yellow. It has a nice ruffled edge, a velvety texture that shows purple hews in some light and very heavy substance. The 5″ slightly fragrant blooms start mid-season. A semi-evergreen tetraploid that adds a wow factor.
This plant has large fans so an order will be two fans rather than my normal three.
$14.00
By Winniford 1969
Bertie is a cute melon colored miniature daylily with an interesting darker orange throat. It starts early and blooms for an extended period. She is a dormant diploid with masses of 2” blooms. It stands only about a foot and a half tall so it’s nice in pots or in the front of the border. She opens well on cold days but reportedly grows well in the south too; a Stout Silver Medal winner.




