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Why Test Daylilies?
Angelo Cerchione, Executive
Director of the All American Daylily Selection Council
(AADSC) asks rhetorically. Why? Because all daylilies are
not created equal. Since the turn of the century, over 1,000
hybridizers have named, registered and introduced over
42,000 daylily varieties - virtually all of which are
described in catalogs as “beautiful”. Yes, we agree; the
blooms are beautiful but how does the rest of the plant
perform?
The question is an important one
because of those 42,000 varieties, 13,000 are still in
commercial circulation. In fact, the confusion over
performance is so great among growers that as late as ten
years ago they largely avoided this species. Wide-scale
testing, an awards program, and earned publicity during the
last six years has made the daylily today the number one
flowering perennial in the United States.
Since we began, we’ve screened and
tested over 6,000 daylilies. Based on our results thus far,
we can reasonably predict that of the 13,000 cultivars in
broad service, 12,000 would fail our commercial criteria
completely, 800 would be rated “Good” and perhaps 200 would
test out as “Excellent”.
We test a daylily for 52 performance
characteristics at test sites that range from USDA Hardiness
Zone 10 in Florida and California to Zone 2 in Alberta,
Canada. Here’s what we’ve learned in the last 12 years. The
average daylily tested will give you two to three weeks of
bloom; top performers, on the other hand, will range from 90
days in Zone 4 to nearly 300 days in Zone 9. This is our
advice to growers and buyers alike. “Look for a daylily that
will bloom for 60% to 90% of the overall bloom period (i.e.,
your entire summer plus some) for all perennials in your
garden.”
Our second strongest concern is foliage
performance. Once the bloom goes off, will you still have an
attractive ground cover? In Zone 6, for example, in North
Carolina, Tennessee, etc., average foliage tends to remain
at its best for six weeks. Our test program looks at foliage
color and density when rating this performance
characteristic. Top-notch daylilies will give you 18 weeks
of super-looking foliage - a bit shorter in the north, much
longer in the south. It’s the difference between a
beautifully manicured and a ratty-looking garden.
You might ask, “How will the gardener
know all of these things that it took AADSC eleven years to
discover?” Here’s a simple guide to the most important
performance characteristics. It is based on what AADSC calls
its “drop dead” criteria.
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Check buds - If the plant before you only has
one or two bloom-carrying stalks (“scapes”), pick the one that
shows at least 15-20 buds per scape. If some of the bloom has
already gone off, the scape will show countable scars where the
buds had been attached. Some daylilies send up lots of scapes.
These are “repeat” bloomers. If you see signs of heavy past or
present scape-making, then be content with smaller numbers of
buds
Check foliage color - Look
for a rich green or blue-green foliage. If the foliage color
is right, the plant will continue to be a rich garden asset
with or without bloom. Paler fern green foliage may be
suitable in areas with light shade.
Check foliage density - A simple test. Look
straight down into the pot and then take that daylily whose
foliage will not allow you to see the fill material below.
Early indications of foliage density spotted this way will
tell you whether your garden will achieve a finished look in
one full season or three.
Check existing bloom - Shop for daylilies in
the afternoon on a hot day. Many daylilies are not sun-fast.
Some will look as though half the daylily bloom was dipped
in bleach by 10:00 am. It’s terribly unsightly. In addition,
some of the darker colored daylilies will “slick” --- the
surface cells holding the pigment will change in color and
often drip off. As a general rule, this second problem can
be minimized by planting dark purples and reds in shadier
areas of the garden.
Check spent bloom - If deadheading is not
your thing, look for the “self-cleaning” daylily. Once the
bloom goes off, the best daylilies roll their flowers into
little cigarette-shaped spents. Unassisted, a self-cleaner
will lose these in two days. Some daylilies will retain
their spent for a week. Look at the flowers before you and
tap the spents with your finger. If they drop off easily,
you have a winner.
Check scape and foliage heights - The ideal
is a scape that carries the bloom at least an inch or two
above the general mass of the foliage. If this is not
evident in the plants before you, your bloom will be hidden
inside the foliage.
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Once you’ve found a daylily that
meets this test and your personal definition of beauty, here are
some other things to consider. Beyond the need for beauty, the
daylily can solve a lot of problems facing gardeners. In point
of fact, we think of the daylily as the “Swiss Army knife of the
plant kingdom”.
Have steep banks that nothing else will grow on?
We’ve reclaimed banks with 70 degree slopes that defied
crown vetch.
Suffering from ocean spray, occasional salt water inundation
or run-off from trucks spreading road salt in winter?
Daylilies are salt tolerant.
Coastal Gardening with
Daylilies
Do you have areas in your garden in which erosion is
rampant?
The root system of the daylily forms a huge chain mail-like
mat beneath the surface.
Live in fire-prone areas? Daylilies are
engorged with water and when planted in mass can stop a
brush fire in its tracks.
Are you seeking a plant that requires very little
maintenance?
For the North Carolina Department of Transportation, the
daylily has become their acknowledged “plant of choice”. In
fact, recent studies have shown that it is cheaper to use
perennials as a soil-stabilizing mechanism along roadsides
than to use grass. North Carolina has already converted over
2,500 acres of roadsides into linear gardens.
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And if that’s not enough, the next
time you have sweet and sour soup at your favorite Chinese
restaurant, be aware that the ingredient called “Gum Jum” or
“Golden Needles” is actually the buds of the daylily.
Practically all of the daylily is edible and is higher in
protein and Vitamin C than most of the vegetables in popular
use.
And let’s not forget beauty! In our
performance verification testing, we have found 28 different
but distinct patterns in the face of the blooms. The flowers
range in size from one inch to ten. Some will have over 100
blooms per scape. The blooms come in most every color except
a true black and a true blue. Usually, the bloom consists of
six petals (actually three sepals and three petals), but
there are doubles (those with over 14 petals) that look like
peonies, and “spiders” with enormously slender petals. Plant
foliage will range in width from 12 to 60 inch clumps, and
in height from 9 to 40 inches, with scapes soaring to six
feet.
What’s really amazing is that
most of the daylilies in long supply today are 30 to 50
years old and, from what we’ve seen so far, they were not
necessarily the best daylilies in their own time.
Why test? To avoid
disappointments, and to benefit from all of the attributes
of America’s favorite perennial.
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