By Henry P. 1978
23″ high 2.75″ bloom diameter
Early-Mid-season bloomer, Re-bloomer, Grows quickly, award winner.
Dormant, Diploid, Fertile both ways.
Yellow with a dark maroon eye zone and a green throat.
$7.00
By Henry-P. – 1985
Doodlebug is a really cute miniature daylily that is only 18 inches tall but is covered with 2.25 inch lemon yellow flowers with a dark purple eye-zone and a green throat. It is an early, mid-season, Dormant, Diploid. I love the contrast when placing her in front of a large spider of a different color.
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.
By Trimmer – 1998
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
By Rushing – 1987
Oh, and what a lovely lady she is…at 20 inches tall she has 6 inch perfectly formed yellow blooms. The flowers are fragrant and ruffled (of course). The banana yellow color extends all the way down to the base of the throat. Even the stamens are this bright banana yellow color. Being a dormant, tetraploid makes it vigorous in our northern gardens. It has big strapping leaves and thick sturdy scapes that have a huge bud count. There are often multiple flowers blooming at the same time. She starts blooming early mid-season but is also one of the latest bloomers in my garden. These flowers open without difficulty even in cold weather.
By Harris-H. – 1982
I love this daylily! He is one of my favorites because someone I know is named Matt. Matt is a big, robust plant with gorgeous yellow-orange and bronze, polychromatic shading and thick, stout flower scapes. The blooms are quite large at 5 ½ inches, and very unusual. He’s round and ruffled with good substance. Every bloom looks different! There are usually several blooms open at one time. It does fine in part-shade and is not bothered by drought. It is billed as a mid-season bloomer, but it is one of the latest to continue to bloom in my garden. Talk about a prolific bloomer — wow!! At 20 inches tall he is a dormant, tetraploid with this parentage (Demetrius × (Matthias × Tet. Frank Henter)). Not too tall to be placed near the front.
$9.00
By Hall 1954
36″ tall and bloom size 4.5″ – zone 3.
Early Mid-season, bi-color; yellow petals alternate with rose petals that have a yellow mid-rib. The throat is bright lime green/yellow.
This is the true Magic Dawn, not the darker one which was mixed up with it long ago and is now often sold commercially.
Dormant, diploid
Height 12″ with a 2″ bloom.
An extra early re-blooming miniature, it is yellow with a very dark maroon eye zone.
This one is way too cute! Even if your garden is tiny you can find room for it. Dormant, Diploid.
By Hudson – 1983
Knickknack is truly the miniature daylily to beat all miniatures. At only 14 inches it is just covered with masses of tiny 1 ½ to 2 inch blooms. It starts blooming early and it just keeps going until frost. It is an orange-gold, Semi-Evergreen, Diploid, with a green throat. The parentage is (Tropical Sherbet × Munchkin Moon). It is quick growing and hardy. Sometimes the flowers don’t open all the way until afternoon, especially in cold weather, but they have such heavy substance that they are usually still good the second day. It also sets pods easily. I can’t wait to see what the seedlings look like.
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