Showing posts with label Pearl Harbor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pearl Harbor. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Observing rebloom

The double whammy of being entirely a novice at daylilies and unobservant / memory-challenged has made me mostly clueless about expectations for the daylilies that I grow . Throw in my failed attempt at recording names and locations in the garden, and I feel really uninformed about my daylilies . If only ogling gorgeous flowers counted as expertise! That being said, my observations today have shed some light on the subject for me .

What I saw were many new scapes emerging on daylilies that had recently used up all the buds on their early scapes . A little light bulb went on in my brain . It made me wonder, "Is this rebloom?" Even though these plants bloomed last year, I have no memory of a resurgence of blooms . I think too many other things were happening for me to take notice . Plus I was never really clear about the definitions of bloom periods: extra early, early, early mid, mid, mid late, late, very late . I'm not sure if they vary from climate to climate or where the growing season is longer like it is in Florida . Admittedly, I haven't done much reading on this, and perhaps the answers are readily available but I just haven't accessed them . Well, why not do some accessing right now?

Ah-ha, how easy was that! The American Hemerocallis Society has a FAQ that is loaded with information, including what they call blooming sequence . So here it is .
Blooming Sequence
Daylilies bloom from early spring until frost, depending on the coldness of the climate . To indicate when a particular cultivar blooms during the season, daylily growers use the following terms and abbreviations (or symbols):
  • Extra Early (EE). These daylilies are the first to bloom, and vary from March or April in the extreme South, to May or June in the North .
  • Early (E). These daylilies bloom three to five weeks prior to the mass of bloom at midseason .
  • Early Midseason (EM). These daylilies bloom one to three weeks before the height of bloom of most cultivars .
  • Midseason (M). These daylilies bloom at the peak of the daylily bloom in your own garden . This ranges from May in the South to July in the North .
  • Late Midseason (LM). These daylilies bloom one to three weeks after the height or peak of bloom in your garden .
  • Late (L). These daylilies bloom when most others have finished blooming, usually four to six weeks after the peak of the season .
  • Very Late (VL). These daylilies are the last to bloom, often late in the summer in the South, fall in the North .
  • Rebloomer (Re). These daylilies bloom more than one time during a single season . Some of these bloom early (e.g., May or June) and then repeat in the fall . Others have a succession of bloom periods, one shortly after another for several months .
Hmmm, that did sound a little bit vague, didn't it? Not anything hard-and-fast, mark-it-on-the-calendar reliable, huh? So maybe I'm seeing the "succession of bloom periods" now . That's encouraging . Blooms in succession, one shortly after another, are very good things . Let me show you what I saw today .
The next four photos are of two clumps of "Sherry Lane Carr' - I think . One I'm positive of and the other ( the plant in the first photo ) not so sure . I was desperately trying to get the last ones in the ground last year after they had been sitting in pans of water for four months, and I failed to write them down on my chart . But they look alike, so I'm making an assumption . This one isn't really finished with its early scapes, but it has two brand new ones . The plant in the last photos has definitely used up its original buds and has two new scapes full of buds . She's an early mid rebloomer .

A wonderful surprise was the plant in the next two photos . It's a NOID . No identification! My gues-timation is that it's an early mid bloomer . I have two clumps of this lovely mauve daylily that puts out lots of flowers, but I didn't know it was a rebloomer . I thought it was done for the year . I'm sure it didn't bloom again last year . Now it has two new scapes and even a new open flower . To complicate things the second plant has no new scapes .The buds in the second photo are in the upper right of the first photo . ( My cameras has a problem with reds, so just believe me that this flower is a medium mauve. )

The next two photos are 'Pearl Harbor', a mid-season bloomer - obviously not finished with its first bloom and still putting out new scapes . This observation leads me to conclude that we must be smack-dab in the middle of mid-season . So June in my garden is mid-season . Do you think I'll remember that next year?

These three photos are 'Blueberry Frost', a mid-season rebloomer . Yesterday I removed all of the spent scapes on the three plants . This is the only flower they have, and it's the first one open on a recent scape with another new one coming along . The second plant has two even newer scapes, while the third has none at this point . They also have rust on the older leaves which seems not to damage the plant, just make it unattractive. Maybe someone can enlighten me .
Here's a better shot of the flower of 'Blueberry Frost' .
This is 'Fred Ham', a mid rebloomer, all done with its first scapes and adding three or four new ones . Don't know if this is still the first bloom or the continuous rebloom .
I think this is 'Evelyn Lela Stout', an early mid rebloomer, except that she's just started blooming ...unless I missed / forgot that she already bloomed . So frustrating not to think sharply anymore . I love it that she has all those buds .
This, I believe, is 'Joan Senior', a nearly white early mid rebloomer . She's been blooming for only a few weeks, a little later than my other early-mids . The photo below shows the flower a bit better .
The next two shots are beautiful to me in an unorthodox way . I hope you think so, too .


Thursday, May 26, 2011

Sundry delights


Imagine my excitement when I saw this beginning of a flower stalk on a Foxglove plant. It's the only one on several plants grown from seeds. I thought they preferred cooler temps and would have been done by now - not just getting started.
'Blush Noisette' (1814) blooms in large clusters, and this is one of them. This bush hasn't looked good this spring, and I was beginning to dislike it. The truth is my watering system had again been attacked by squirrels, and it was simply in need of water. Now it's beginning to look better. Roses do like their water.


This daylily is called 'Frilly Bliss', is quite large and has Unusual Form. Why would anyone think that?
'Souvenir de la Malmaison' and friend
Orange isn't my thing, and I don't know this one's name, but I really have taken a liking to it waving in the breeze on its tall, thin scapes. I bought a box of them at Sam's some years ago, then was disappointed that the color turned out as it did. I'm not disappointed anymore. They add so much fun to the garden.
Such a bright lime yellow! And a big bloomer as well. I ordered it from a less than upstanding online nursery before I knew anything about daylilies and didn't make note of the name. It won't be long before I can divide it, and then I'll have TWO!!
'All American Magic' was a much deeper wine color than the camera was able to capture but, apparently, just for this one cool day. Since then it's been lavender/pink (lighter than this photo) but beautiful nonetheless and a nice cluster bloomer.
'All American Magic'
'Becky Lynn' - I love her color which the camera was really not able to capture. This color is nice but not as nice as the real thing.

The box label showed a pink daylily, so I was disappointed again when the flowers were gold. Well, it didn't take me long to recognize how much they popped in the midst of foliage and pink blooms. I love them, and naturally I want more.
'Clotilde Soupert' (1889, polyantha) - she's a bloom machine! Her flowers are a scant 2" in diameter, but they have a ton of petals. In other parts of the country they say she balls a lot but hardly at all here. She blooms in clusters of about ten flowers and has a lovely fragrance. Very healthy, too, maybe because one of her parents was a Tea Rose.
Looks like something from a creature feature, doesn't it? It's today's photo of yesterday's flowers. They don't get their name for no reason - "day" lilies. Today a stunning flower, tomorrow a star of scary movies. It's name is 'Blueberry Frost'.
Here's the real 'Blueberry Frost', bluer than this in real life but not really "blue", if you know what I mean. Maybe in someone else's soil she's bluer. She's planted in front of 'Le Vesuve'.

'Bermuda's Anna Olivier'
Here's all of 'Le Vesuve' (6' wide by about 4.5' tall) with her sidekicks 'Bluberry Frost' daylilies, and way over on the left is 'Pearl Harbor' daylily.
Don't they look like sweet buddies? 'Pearl Harbor' and 'Le Vesuve'.
Here's 'Blueberry Frost' again.
And again.

I managed to get one plant of Zinnia 'Purity' seeds to survive infancy and grow in the garden. Now it's about 3' tall and the blooms have changed from slightly more than single to this big one, probably 4" in diameter.
The previous flower is in the background of this photo. Doing the seeds and seeing the seedlings grow into mature - and different looking plants has been an enjoyable education.
A cluster of 'Souv de la Malmaison' in the front garden
I think this is 'Chaleur'.
These are two flowers of 'Bow Bells', David Austin's rose from 1991. This rose steals my heart every time I look at her. She's in almost complete shade due to summertime sun-shift, and she doesn't seem to mind a bit - yet. So healthy, too.

Is over-exposure possible for 'Souv de la Malmaison'? Personally, I can't can't get enough of her.
These are the biggest leaves I've ever seen on my 'Aaron' caladiums. They're huge.
Catch ya later!