Montreal Gazette

LOVE IS BETTER THE SECOND TIME AROUND

An avid gardener’s passion for day lilies blooms anew

- ADRIAN HIGGINS

If you garden long enough, your relationsh­ip with certain plants changes. You play the role of Tudor monarch, allowing your fawning courtiers to fall in and out of favour. I used to love that dainty, lemon-yellow daisy called the coreopsis but haven’t felt a need to plant it in many years. When I first saw a perennial named brunnera, its spindly blue flowers seemed weedy. I later came to see that the gardener needs to plant it in groups for the floral effect and that moreover, brunnera is best grown as a foliage plant in partial shade, much as you would a hosta. It’s a lovely and valuable plant for the shade garden.

In the 1990s, I was smitten by the day lily, especially when I discovered that breeders could deliver forms that were so far advanced from the ditch-weed tawny day lily (Hemerocall­is fulva), or even the insufferab­ly cheerful Stella de Oro (minimum cold hardiness zone 3), a delicate gold re-bloomer that was suddenly everywhere.

I was struck by varieties with broad, folded-back petals and palpably thick flowers, some with crystallin­e dustings, which had the substance a summer flower needs to stand up to the season’s solar assault. As for colours, I liked the softer yellows, pinks and oranges, many with contrastin­g rings, bands and an inner throat of green or yellow.

Eventually, I lost interest for various reasons. As beautiful as the varieties were, the foliage always went downhill quickly after flowering. I planted them en masse, so when they withered, a whole patch of garden turned empty and ugly. In addition, I became more interested in naturalist­ic planting schemes, and highly bred day lilies can be hard to place. Also, I was drawn in a big way to true lilies, whose towering spikes of trumpets are far from naturalist­ic, but they do perfume the air in a way that day lilies cannot.

It had been so long since I had planted a new day lily that I sensed that I was denying myself the delight of planting afresh. After a span of 20 years or so, you see a plant with fresh eyes, fresh passions, and the plant itself is bound to change because with day lilies, there’s always a new variety to savour.

There are two enduring realities with day lilies: First, the blooms last only 24 hours or so, but a single plant can produce many flowers over a three-week period, especially if grown in enriched soil and watered well in June. Second, this fertility lends itself to hybridizin­g by hobbyists and pros alike, and there are a ridiculous number of registered cultivars, more than 52,000 by the last decade. Many are almost identical and prove that you can have too much of a good thing.

Images of day lilies go only so far. The way to assess them is in the garden, so when Gail Gee, owner of a showcase three-acre garden in Fulton, Md., asked me to come and look at her day lilies, I needed little persuading.

I have tended to give red flowers in general (other than roses) a wide berth, but one becomes more adventurou­s with age. I warmed, so to speak, to Gee’s “hot” border where reds, oranges and strong yellows are used in considered combinatio­ns.

Instead of my clumsy mass plantings, she has used them effectivel­y as discrete specimens, as clumps of paired varieties twinned by colour and, perhaps most effectivel­y, as a dancing thread through a stretch of border.

In the colour-echo category, she paired Susquehann­a Echo (zone 4a), pink with a red eye and edge, with Carolina Cranberry (zone 3), described as a bright cranberry wine colour with a deeper cranberry halo. Both are full and large, about 13 centimetre­s across, and they contrast and harmonize together at the same time. The beauty of day lilies is that if you have clashing colours, you can move them readily; this is best done in September, dividing time.

In another combo, she paired two solids — the strong yellow-orange Jersey Spider (zone 3), with rosered Oriental Ruby (zone 3) — and placed them next to a heuchera clump with rose- and green-coloured foliage. Most effective.

I’m partial to rich orange flowers and loved Heavenly Dragon Fire (zone 3), with its elongated petals and sheer size, 18 centimetre­s or so. One of its parents is a day lily named Primal Scream (zone 3), which is lower growing and a slightly lighter orange.

I’m not keen on the deep burgundy-reds of some day lilies, preferring the wine-reds of such varieties as Highland Lord (zone 4a), and Heavenly United We Stand (zone 3), a tall and floriferou­s variety with a contrastin­g green throat. One of Gee’s loveliest reds is Flamenco Queen (zone 3), which is full of big blooms held conspicuou­sly above the foliage. An older red variety named Lusty Lealand (zone 5a) is still striking in the size and presentati­on of its upward-looking flowers.

A number of varieties are based on day lily species that present smaller and more spidery flowers on slender, tall and upright stems that are handsome features in themselves. I particular­ly liked Autumn Minaret (zone 3), with gentle orange colours to match its delicate blooms.

 ?? PHOTOS: ADRIAN HIGGINS/WASHINGTON POST ?? Heavenly Dragon Fire (zone 3) is red-orange with elongated petals.
PHOTOS: ADRIAN HIGGINS/WASHINGTON POST Heavenly Dragon Fire (zone 3) is red-orange with elongated petals.
 ??  ?? By cross-breeding with tall, slender flowered species, breeders developed varieties such as Autumn Minaret (zone 3).
By cross-breeding with tall, slender flowered species, breeders developed varieties such as Autumn Minaret (zone 3).

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