During the winter of 2007-08, I covered two separate 47 foot rows with fence wire and plastic. I kept the frost off the seedlings that were growing there, and I ocasionally removed the plastic covering to water the daylilies, or to let the rain water

Seedling 8-243 may be an evergreen, or perhaps a semi-evergreen. It is not dormant. The cross is as follows: (Grace 578 Seedling x Judy Farquhar). The Grace 578 Seedling has a number of important parents but one of the most important is TET. SILOAM RALPH HENRY. I would note that the Grace 578 Seedling had little branching, but was beautiful. I have used JUDY FARQUHAR as a parent, and it does not usually produce beautiful seedlings. Tall seedlings? Yes! Beautiful? No. But what a change with Seedling 8-243. A truly beautiful seedling. In fact, when basically everything in our garden had finished blooming, it stood tall and bloomed so gorgeously.
Here are some technical facts about Seedling 8-243 blooming in the outside garden: 32" tall, 3-way branching, 19 buds, and a 7 1/2" flower. Truly outstanding technical facts.
Well,
Now my question is whether I can take dormants to 8-243 and produce sturdy seedlings that will survive our winters. I am in the process of this investigation. I have a seedling that is a cross between ANGELS GATHER AROUND and TET. EVELYN GATES that is beautiful, with very little branching, but is dormant. I am crossing it to 8-243. I am also going to use WHITE AS SNOW because it also is a 7" flower that is dormant.
It is fun to work with big yellow daylilies!
Bill
Hi Mr. Bill,
ReplyDeleteHope all is well. The pictures of seedling 8-243 are stunning. The edge is super and the size is what I like,"LARGE".
You bring up a good subject that I have been wondering about.I have bought lilies from The Stamile's and others and have never been able to get alot of the branching that are in the description. I water, fertilize, but never seem to get the branching and bud count. I wonder when they are describing the lily in the catalog, is it grown in the garden or in the greenhouse?
I really enjoy reading about your lilies and seeing the beautiful pictures.
Keep up the good work.
Greg
Good Morning Greg,
ReplyDeleteIn the climate here at my garden, daylilies that I have purchased from Florida, likewise will not produce the branching and bud advertised in the catalogues. I have several ideas. The cold weather prevents the growth that can be accomplished in Florida. Second, the time for the daylily to grow to maturity is reduced. Third, the soil that is used in our gardens does not fairly compare to the soils used in the commercial gardens. Fertilizers, chemicals, shade screens, these also have an impact. The amount of water that we use has an impact.
As for the Stamiles, you must admit that they are at the top of the mountain in growing daylilies. Who is better? I mean, count the awards and Stout medals.
As for the difference in the size of 8-243, outside and then in the greenhouse, I would think that as a seedling it had not yet reached its full potential. I believe that the growth in the greenhouse approximates what could be accomplished in Florida.
Thanks for your note.
Bill