It won multiple awards including the Honorable Mention , the Award of Merit and the Stout Medal - daylily's highest award Regarded as one of the best purple daylilies, Hemerocallis 'Bela Lugosi' is a midseason Daylily which produces profuse blooms of large, 6 in. Blooming in mid to late summer, this clump-forming perennial grows up to 33 in. This tetraploid Daylily is semi-evergreen. Gracing the summer garden, award-winner Hemerocallis 'Catherine Woodbury' produces elegant, lavender-pink blossoms with a delicate golden eye atop a mound of arching leaves.
Each very fragrant flower, 6 in. Blooming in mid to late summer, this clump-forming perennial grows up to 30 in. Fragrant, Hemerocallis 'Charles Johnston' is a remarkable early midseason Daylily which produces an abundance of large, lightly ruffled and rounded, rich cherry-red flowers, 6 in.
Blooming in early to mid summer, this clump-forming perennial grows up to 24 in. This tetraploid Daylily is semi-evergreen and enjoys an excellent reblooming performance. Winner of the Honorable Mention and the Award of Merit Hemerocallis 'Cherry Cheeks' is a late midseason Daylily which produces profuse blooms of large, 6 in.
Blooming in mid to late summer, this clump-forming deciduous perennial grows up to 28 in. Won multiple prestigious awards including the Honorable Mention of the American Hemerocallis Society in and the Award of Merit in Sweetly fragrant, Hemerocallis 'Country Melody' is an attractive midseason Daylily which produces an abundance of large, elegantly ruffled, true pink flowers, up to 5.
It is nicely branched and has a great bud count. This tetraploid Daylily is dormant deciduous and considered a 'Designer Daylily', on account of its exceptional bloom performance, vivid colored flowers, great winter hardiness and vigorous habit. Blooming in midsummer, this clump-forming deciduous perennial grows up to 30 in. Winner of multiple awards, including the Honorable Mention and the Eugene S. Foster Award Awarded to the best late-blooming cultivars.
Hemerocallis 'Indian Giver' is a breathtaking early midseason Daylily which produces profuse blooms of large, up to 4. This diploid Daylily is semi-evergreen and is an excellent reblooming Daylily. Blooming from early to late summer, this clump-forming perennial grows up to 20 in. Ranking high in the AHS popularity polls, Hemerocallis 'Janice Brown' is a gorgeous early midseason Daylily which produces profuse bright pink flowers, 4.
It is nicely branched with plenty of blooms and enjoys a good rebloom performance. This diploid Daylily is semi-evergreen and winner of multiple prestigious awards including the Stout Medal Daylily's Highest Award. Blooming from early to mid summer, this clump-forming perennial grows up to 21 in. One of the most popular near whites ever created, Hemerocallis 'Joan Senior' is an elegant early midseason Daylily which produces an abundance of large creamy white flowers, 6 in.
This diploid Daylily is evergreen and winner of multiple awards. Blooming from early to mid summer, this clump-forming perennial grows up to 25 in. A very attractive bicolor variety, Hemerocallis 'Karen Sue' is a midseason Daylily which produces an abundance of large flowers, 5. Blooming in midsummer, this clump-forming deciduous perennial grows up to 20 in. This diploid Daylily is dormant deciduous. Hemerocallis 'Moonlit Masquerade' is a gorgeous early midseason Daylily which produces an abundance of large, 5.
It is nicely branched with plenty of blooms and enjoys an excellent rebloom performance. This tetraploid Daylily is semi-evergreen and winner of multiple prestigious awards. Blooming from early to mid summer, this clump-forming perennial grows up to 26 in. A highly popular orange Daylily, multiple award-winner Hemerocallis 'Primal Scream' produces a profusion of vibrant tangerine blossoms with slightly ruffled, recurved petals and soft green throats.
Each flower, up to 7. Blooming in mid-late summer, this clump-forming deciduous perennial grows up to 34 in.
One of the top favorite daylilies, award-winner Hemerocallis 'Red Volunteer' is a midseason Daylily which produces masses of extra large, 7 in. Blooming in mid to late summer, this clump-forming deciduous perennial grows up to 30 in. This tetraploid Daylily is dormant deciduous and won many awards, including the Honorable Mention , Award of Merit and the LAA - Lenington All-American Award which is awarded to the best performers in all areas of the country.
Hemerocallis 'Rocket City' is an eye-catching early midseason Daylily which produces blooms of bittersweet orange trumpets with a contrasting burnt-orange eyezone.
Both petals and sepals are delicately recurved. Incredibly pretty and delightfully fragrant, Hemerocallis 'Siloam Double classic' is a lovely early midseason Daylily which produces large, fully double, soft salmon-pink flowers, 5 in.
Copiously ruffled, the flowers last at least 16 hrs extended blooms but no more than 24 hours, opening up in the morning and withering during the forthcoming night, possibly replaced by another one on the same scape flower stalk the next day. The incredible adaptability and dependability of daylilies led to extensive breeding over hundreds of years. There is still a lot of confusion floating around out there about where daylilies belong, but the fact is that they are not actually lilies!
Daylilies are in the genus Hemerocallis, which is a member of the family Asphodelaceae, and subfamily Hermocallidoideae. True lilies, on the other hand, are in the genus Lilium, family Liliaceae, and subfamily Lilioideae.
True lilies, in the genus Lilium, are quite toxic to humans and animals. Whereas the widespread orange daylily, Hemerocallis fulva, has been known to be edible for generations. There are not many waterwise perennials out there that have the lush foliage and abundant bloom of a daylily. If you live in an area that experiences consistently dry summers or occasional droughts, adding some daylilies to your garden is a smart move.
They provide dependable color and verdant foliage through even the hottest, driest summers. Usually, plants with low water requirements despise getting their feet wet.
Not so with the daylily. Most varieties hold up well in these conditions and will thrive with the extra water. Daylilies are a great choice for adding a punch of color to water-side gardens like the one pictured here.
Plus, they will provide the erosion control many water-side locales require see 2. Daylilies get their name from their flowers, which typically bloom for a day before being replaced by a new one. Most varieties have a flush of flowers in the summer and bloom for about a month. But new varieties break all the rules. Reblooming daylily varieties, like Happy Returns Dwarf Daylily , have two periods of bloom. Usually, reblooming varieties will bloom through late spring or early summer, stop blooming and then bloom again in late summer or early fall.
These extended-bloom varieties offer a solution to the short bloom time of other daylily varieties and provide more color in the garden for far longer. This deciduous daylily produces a grassy clump of foliage. Keep this option that grows to be about inches tall consistently moist, especially while it is blooming.
The long, thin, blue-lavender frost with soft blue-purple halo petals of the Skywalker daylily stands in stark contrast to its lime-green throat. The 6. If you forget to water your flowers occasionally, this can be an excellent option because it is more drought-resistant than most options. This option goes dormant when not blooming. Plant it in well-drained soil in full sun or partial shade. The custard candy daylily produces off-white trumpet-shaped flowers with buttery yellow overtones. Each flower has a yellow throat and a purple ring near the stem.
This plant that will grow to be about 18 inches tall will come back annually for nearly 10 years. Plant this daylily where it gets some sun, but this plant is not picky about its soil conditions. Watch it bloom in the summer and enjoy its grassy foliage until the first hard frost. This option starts blooming in the early summer and blooms to fall.
Unlike many daylilies, this option struggles to reach inches tall, but its fragrant blooms can grow up to 6-inches tall on top of the stalk. This sun-loving plant does well in damp or drier locations.
Its gently arching foliage remains green until the first hard frost.
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