Shown are some pink and (what I think of as) orange sherbet colored lilies that it seems like all the scales in 3 bulbs for each color came up, and some new (last year they didn’t bloom) daylilies “Night Beacon” which had a lot more red on the petals and much less of the yellow throat on the packaging than in my picture…
¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • @SchmidtGenetics
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    6 months ago

    Stunning!

    If I get some flower/garden beds ready over the summer I’m gonna split my Lilies and add more for color and variety. Can split and replant the one bed and make another, even if it’s temporary for the one year.

    • Mom Nom MomOP
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      26 months ago

      Thank you!
      My spouse floated an idea that would double the size of this flower bed.
      🥰
      I’m all about that! I wanna split and scramble some of the colors around, now that I know what it all looks like!🤞

      • @SchmidtGenetics
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        16 months ago

        I’m also loving the non-variegated hostas, I don’t think I’ve seen that before.

        • Mom Nom MomOP
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          26 months ago

          Ya know, I think those are actually all volunteers - I think we also had only seen variegated, except for this one kind that are giant and blue.
          ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
          Thank you, though! We also are loving how little grass can grow between/beneath them!

          • @SchmidtGenetics
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            16 months ago

            I had some hostas, until I realized they don’t like full sun and cooked them. And then the next year they didn’t come back, I figured they were dead from the heat stress, winter, or the mulch was too hard packed.

            So colour me surprised when two came back! And now they are nicely shaded by the trees that was the plan when we planted them years ago. The trees were just too small haha.

            • Mom Nom MomOP
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              26 months ago

              It’s great that you got to keep the original plan, once the trees got a little bigger!

              But it’s really quite amazing how well hostas do, when given shade. We have so many (in the back) that aren’t even the same as any of the other hostas in our back yard!

              We had a similar (but reversed) situation - had a giant oak in the front yard when we bought the house. We put hostas in the shade - our front yard was full shade, so they did really well.

              A couple of years later, our oak got sick and full shade turned into part shade. Then we had to take it down, so the already stressed and crispy hostas - which had already stopped doing well - seem to be barely present in the front.

              We don’t have as many hostas in the front anymore.