a Girl and her Garden

...learning about daylilies one blog post at a time!

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a Girl and her Garden

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Showing posts with label daylily specialist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label daylily specialist. Show all posts

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Daylily Haiku Thursday | Daylily Blog about a Blank Slate!

<posted March 14, 2013> 

This is the daylily H. 'Cave Creek Canyon.'  I just love its edge, which seems to stand erect off of the petal, and not just sit on the outskirts of it.   Its tightly sewn, showing off the brilliant gold-metallic coloration!

Here is the spring project, friends.  The boulders and the sandstone stairs are finally in and placed just so.  It's a blank slate for the start of our real front yard.

Will it be round or spiky; tall or short?  Wispy and full of motion, or organized and tidy?  Evergreens, trees, boxwoods, hosta, hydrangea, daylily, daisy, canna, sage, plumbago, phlox, wooly thyme or roses?  YES!


My neighbors are as curious as I am as to what it will become...

C'mon Spring!

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Come back! | Daylily Blog about Regret and Reclaiming

Posted January 28, 2013.  This is one of the last shots of my garden from fall 2012...that's H. 'Kings Cloak' still blooming in November, and its the old Munson daylily I bought while on my honeymoon in Vegas.  I carried it home, potted, on the plane.  He should have known what he was in for then...

For a recent project, I needed to comb throught he thousands of daylily photos on my computer and find some specific ones.  While carrying out that arduous task, I happened upon photos of my garden I had long forgot.  Shots from 2006, 2007 and earlier, which were of cultivars that have long left my collection.
Some of them caused me to roll my eyes and remember exactly why they no longer grow here, and others I was sad to remember I no longer owned.

For example, H. 'Gavin Petit.'  For three years after its introduction, I lusted to grow it, but couldnt afford it.  Finally I won it in an auction and enjoyed the vibrant and gaudy blooms in my garden.  I dont grow it anymore because someone visited my garden and made me "an offer I couldnt refuse" for the clump and off it went.  At that time, the high price she was willing to pay overshadowed my desire to have it among the other hundreds of daylilies in my collection moving to the new gardens here in Illinois.  Blinded by the dollar, I was, and now I wish I had that daylily back.  I love the splatter pattern at the edge of the eyezone.  I also enjoy the thick edge and unassuming sepals.  Sepals that stick out and do crazy things do not appeal to me.    (looking at this photo closely, I also see my old clumps of veronica in the background.  I miss those, too.  Left them behind at our old house...)

I also terribly miss one of the most sophisticated gray-pinks I have ever seen, H. 'Janet Benz.'

BACKSTORY: One time I was working in a garden digging plants for a club plant sale.  The hybridizer/enthusiast was donating lots of clumps to the club and all we had to do was come dig them.  As a nice reward for our efforts, he gifted each worker with one single fan of anything he was growing.  I could not believe the offer.  My choice was H. 'Janet Benz.'  I could not have afforded to buy this at that time, and it was not widely distributed, so I was thrilled to get it.  After about 7 years growing in my garden, I sold it off in about 10 double fans to clubs visiting my garden before I moved to Illinois.  I miss it.

I also miss H. 'Royal Butterfly.'  And H. 'Fresh Start.' 


And H. 'Spacecoast Tiny Perfection.'


Of the over 400 (I've lost count since last Fall) I still grow, I'm finding new favorites.  As I looked through these photos from the last 10 years of gardening with daylilies, I see the growth of my collection. Not only in quantity, but quality.  I do still have many I started with, but its easier these days to dig and sell a clump in order to make room for other possibilities.  If you like to trade, sell or buy daylilies from other daylily folks, you should check out the Facebook page for doing that.  It's a growing group of folks who are interested in making some deals.  See it and/ or join it here. Post something cool for sale or ask for something you have been looking to add.

Yes, I do miss the ones that are now growing for someone else, but I love what the future holds, too.

one of the islands in my back yard...summer 2012

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Something to Ponder... | Daylily Blog on Exhibition Judging


H. 'Osterized' (Hite-Davisson 1999)

Scenario:  A daylily cultivar is registered with the AHS as 50% polymerous.  Said flower is brought to an exhibition show on a day when it is not showing any polymerous characteristics.

Here is the AHS Standard Scale of Points that Judges are required to use for on-scape, registered cultivars:


On-Scape Registered Cultivars
Distinction
-
Flower

·         Color
10
·         Form
10
·         Texture
10
·         Substance
10
·         Size of flower
10
Scape

·         Height and strength
15
·         Buds
10
·         Branching
10

Condition and Grooming

15


Total possible points
100


Question:  Using the exhibit described in the Scenario above, how many, if any, points would you deduct from the 10 allowed for form?

Follow-up question:  How many, if any, other points would you deduct and from what category?

A personal example, if you are still with me.  I exhibited a GORGEOUS scape if Judy Davisson's H. 'Osterized' at a show this year.  This flower is registered as an unusual form crispate and 50% polymerous.  It's a 10" tet that once established, blows most other more flashy daylilies out of the water.

Because it is registered with ANY polymerous characteristics, AHS mandates that this flower, whether it polys or not on show day, must be placed in Section 5, competing with doubles, polymerous and other multiform daylilies.  
The point of this post is not whether that daylily needs to be placed in the section with the doubles.  That is a much higher discussion for another time when we have a few margaritas in us.  This question is to define HOW to judge it now that AHS has told us where this flower is to be placed.

I would like to investigate how other judges would fault said exhibit for NOT showing a polymerous characteristic on show day.  After all, 50% is only half of the blooms, so would it be more of a fault if it WAS poly'ing or NOT poly'ing?
I'm curious how judges, exhibitors and critics of the system would use the above scale of points to score the exhibit.

E-mail me and tell me your thoughts.  I'd love to know what they are, even if you aren't a judge.  Maybe you're a hybridizer.  Or an exhibitor.  Or maybe you are a casual observer who stays as far away from daylily shows as possible for these very reasons.  I don't mind where you fall and am not sure I have any empirical method of my own.  I just want the discussion so we can work toward being on the same page on these types of intricate judging nuances.

You can also enter them in the comments by clicking the POST A COMMENT link below!

Discuss.


Thursday, January 3, 2013

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Daylily Haiku Thursday | The end of 2012....


Daylilies are a delicious diversion to daily crazy.  Much like the unbearable pain in Connecticut, they remind me that life is breathtakingly brief. 
Hug someone extra hard.  I did.

This will be the last post until after the new year- I will take a couple weeks off from the computer to enjoy the holiday, soak up my family and read to my son.  Maybe I'll scrapbook.  Or maybe I won't.  I'll surely stoke a lot of fires, cook a lot of soups, and give a lot of hugs.

Have you seen some of the new collections for 2013?  I liked these:


Merry Christmas, Happy New Year and be nice, y'all.  It's easier.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Structure and Mystery | Daylily Haiku Thursday

behind, I witness
structure and mystery of
a beautiful face!


Thursday, October 25, 2012

Breathing Room.... | Daylily Haiku Thursday

It is fall clean-up time in the gardens.  Its also the time where I notice all those garden chess moves I said I'd make and never got to in the bloom season.

moving and changing.
the fall is falling too fast
for my summer dreams!


These are the raised beds that serve as the home to my seedlings.  They live at my parent's house about 35 minutes from here - far enough away that I cannot obsess about them every day.  My dad does that.  About five years ago he went through several very serious surgeries and we (and he) didn't think he would make it out the other side.  For a man who hardly ever went to the doctor in 60 years, smoked and drank like every night was a bad redux of a Guns 'n Roses song, eight trips under the knife in one year is enough for anyone to start looking for God.  
But, he pulled through - after a long and hard recovery - and started to enjoy the overflow gardens I planted in their yard for my seedlings.

That was in 2006- and today that one original raised bed has now mutated to six raised beds that house only daylilies I have hybridized.  These daylilies do not exist anywhere else, there are none exactly like these in the world.  I didn't buy them.  I pollinated flowers, created seed, germinated the seed and POOF!  A new daylily was born!  My dad gets a special kick out of being the only one who has these particular daylilies.  He likes to be the first one to see them open.  Some of them are dogs, and some are wonderful and registration-worthy, but he likes them all.  And I like that after his forced-disability into retirement he has found something to fill his days.

After bloom season this year, I lamented about the state this overflowing bed.  The above pic was taken in June and the below pic was taken at the end of September.  You can see the PVC pipe lengths that allow me to insert the tag for better viewing above the foliage.  This also helps his ailing back when he takes pictures.  NEAT NOTE:  I also made these so that 26" sticks out of the ground, therefore, I have a quick, real measure of what height the scapes are at.  Look back at that first picture.  Now realize the pipes are 26", you can guesstimate how tall some of those seedlings are.  These clumps need dividing and culling something fierce.  So, I tackled it one Sunday this month.


First, I cut back all this foliage to about 6" and made some tough decisions about which ones no longer deserved some garden real estate.  I dug out 31, 3-year old clumps (some bigger than others) and ruthlessly culled.  

My dad said he could hear the plants screaming as I threw them in the compost.  Sigh.

After 3 years, the soil also needed some amendment and aeration.  Some of the roots had fused to the sideboards of the bed, so I knew I needed to get deeper in the bed and provide more space.  I added mushroom compost, sweet peat, top soil and a couple cups of Milorganite (yes, I am well aware that it is pelletized waste dredged from the sewers of Milwaukee) to the bed and stirred well.  I used my trusty Garden Claw and mixed by hand and hazmat suit.  I think we were able to add about 3" of depth in the bottom of the bed, too, so that will help.


The arduous task of dividing the clumps and replanting began next.  See them there in the background of the above photo?  I only kept seedlings that had future promise as stand-alone introductions.  I did not keep any of the "well, maybe someday..." or "it has potential as a bridge plant..." seedlings.  18 of the 31 got a space in the new bed.  Some clumps I divided, others I did not.  If it was 3 fans or less, I either culled it or replanted it as it was.  (IMHO, 3 fans in 3 years is not a good increaser.) 

I used my Daylily Divider (click here for the website) to divide the clumps.  That tool, with its new foot-post add-on is like a hot knife in butter.  Now that I have learned how to use it properly, I wont be without it.  My hands have a perpetually dull ache from old injuries and prying fans apart by hand is excruciating after about an hour.  I love this tool.

I planted the double and triple fan divisions in rows, replaced the PVC pipes, inserted the plant tags at the top, sprinkled with PREEN and called it a day.  My dad will mulch it after Thanksgiving to allow for the fall rains to reach the bottom of the new bed.
  

There are six real contenders for a future introduction in here and a few others that deserve just one more year of evaluation.  
The bed heaved a sigh of relief at its new organization.  The plants definitely have more room to soak up sun and water now, unobstructed by overgrown and no longer desirable neighbors.

I cant wait to see what these burst into next summer.  Here are a few of the faces that bloomed in this bed this year. I kept them all.   Some parents in these crosses are DEBBIES VOWS, BUTTER CREAM, and SABINE BAUER.  (FYI- H. 'Butter Cream' and H. 'Sabine Bauer' is a major dream cross for me, and one that is doubtful to ever be fruitful...)  That second one below had 45-50 buds on it!  The highest bud count in my seedling bed!

I think you can click on the images to make them bigger.


Anyhoo, that's the biggest construction going on here now.  I have my "circle bed" in shambles right now trying to replant clumps and move hunks of low-growing salvia around.  Today the temps are in the 70's and I'm hoping for two hours of dedicated gardening time this afternoon.  If I could just keep Floyd out of the dirt and stop him from eating the mulch and attacking the shovel and chasing the rake and biting my ankles, I would be more productive.  

FLOYD!!! (he's so high fashion)

Til next time...

Monday, July 16, 2012

2012 National Convention Recap | Pretty Petals Gardens

It is hard to digest the last week in my daylily life.  Finding words to describe a five-day daylily celebration is a daunting task.  I find myself quiet about the event, and holding the memories quiet in my own mind.  There are over 700 pictures from the 2012 American Hemerocallis Society National Convention on my camera, bags full of new plant acquisitions and sunburned shoulders to remind me of the trip and I hundreds of stories to tell.
I started my "Week of Wonderful" at Pretty Petals Gardens, where I worked to help prepare the garden for a tour.  This picture is the sunrise on Thursday morning, the day 200 daylily friends were scheduled to tour her gardens. A sign of such fiery beauty signaled a day full of joyful power and humble wonder.
  

I made my special Strawberry Sangria for her event, coaching David Kirchhoff through my recipe.  We iced hundreds of cookies, pulled thousands of weeds and laughed a million times.  We painted benches, scrubbed pots and planted colorful annuals.  The buses showed up and the show was on!


This tour was in addition to the two days of tours that were planned for the convention, and it was sold out almost as soon as it was announced.  Although she had experienced severe drought and heat and a tough school schedule, we were ready for the wonderful day.  Guests enjoyed music and shady places to sit while enjoying my special strawberry sangria.  One of the most fun moments of this day was coaching THE David Kirchhoff through my recipe for this drink, and watching him wield a knife cutting the fresh fruit was hilarious.  Our mimosas and lemon-raspberry cookies were a hit.  I think I liked the cream cheese fruit pizzas we made for the afternoon bus better than the lemon cookies, but that is still up for debate.



Kimberly has introduced daylilies like H. 'Big Red Express', H. 'Peasant Blouse' and H. 'Starry Eyed Piranha' along with about 25 other worthy and interesting plants.  These three are big and wonderful and full of intense color.  The scapes are tall and well-branched, and most of all - they are worthy of adding to your garden.  You can find her stuff here, and can email her for convention specials.  She might still be offering her "Buy 3 Get The 4th Free" Sale she offered the day of this tour.  Here are the three I mentioned above, showing off in the tour gardens:

H. 'Big Red Express' (6.5"+)

H. 'Peasant Blouse' (6"+)

H. 'Starry Eyed Piranha' (6"+)

If you asked me, I would also recommend H. 'Purple Eyed Pirate' (highly) and H. 'Deep Pearl.' 

Kicking off day one with a beautiful sunrise and great hard-working friends was just what we all needed.  We were able to reconnect and get ready to celebrate our favorite flower with 600 of our closest gardening friends. This day was only the beginning...tomorrow I will post about Day 1 of the official AHS National Garden Tours.  We saw 8 wonderful gardens over two days, so you are in for 8 straight days of eye candy!

Kimberly and I celebrate the end of a successful and fun day in the garden!


SEE ALL POSTS ON THIS TOPIC HERE!

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Daylily Haiku Thursday | Guest Inspiration

Gardens burst with color,
Yellow, orange, red wave freely.
Fireworks light night sky.


Here is H. 'Holiday Party' showing its' stuff on July 4th.  I took two weeks off from the creative process of haiku and you have surprised me with the gift of your own!  Several folks have sent ME haiku to enjoy.  That is a wonderful gift - thank you!

Today's haiku comes to us from my new friend Terry, who is a regular reader of the dirt here at A Girl and Her Garden.  Thanks for thinking of me.  

I could take a thousand pictures of this daylily.  I know. I say that a lot.  


Happy post July 4th...we are now closer to the end of this year than we are to the beginning.  What stories will you have from the 2012 daylily season?  Did you learn anything new?  Did you meet new people?  Did you find new ways to be inspired by the daylily?  

There is still time for all of that...get to it!  ;)

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