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#1
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Anyone know of a resource for tiger lilly info?
Googling didn't help much at all.
Stepping outside today, I was amazed at how fragrant these things are! I'm going to pick up a bunch more, because I just *love* the smell they produce! -- Gareee's Homepage: http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine.../mainframe.htm Remove Delicious spam to reply |
#2
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Gareeeİ wrote:
Googling didn't help much at all. Stepping outside today, I was amazed at how fragrant these things are! I'm going to pick up a bunch more, because I just *love* the smell they produce! I got mine from Moore Watergardens (St. Thomas, ON, Canada), who normally know everything there is to know - but afaik it was never even in their catalogue, so I suspect they don't know much, either. -- derek |
#3
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We used to grow them outside our
house on the coast of British Columbia (actually on a salt water inlet). One time my brother and I decoracted our dad's birthday cake with them. When we were lighting the candles a couple of spiders, who had hitched a ride on the flowers, decided it would be a good time to abandon ship! Dad was a good sport and ate the cake anyway ;-) kathy :-) |
#4
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LOL, Kathy!
No luck getting more of them.. they sold out in about an hour yesterday. Anyone know if you cut the flower off, if they'll regrow one the same year? (some were damaged by the winds) They were very rootbound in the pots, so I think they will like thier new homes. We have daylillies growing wild here as well, and while they look great, they don;t have the fragrance the tiger lillies do. -- Gareee's Homepage: http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine.../mainframe.htm Remove Delicious spam to reply |
#5
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Gareeeİ wrote:
LOL, Kathy! No luck getting more of them.. they sold out in about an hour yesterday. Anyone know if you cut the flower off, if they'll regrow one the same year? (some were damaged by the winds) They were very rootbound in the pots, so I think they will like thier new homes. We have daylillies growing wild here as well, and while they look great, they don;t have the fragrance the tiger lillies do. Oh. You're not talking about the same thing at all :-) I thought you meant a water lily - it is a pond group after all. My "tiger" lily was a tropical and so-called because it had black-striped leaves. In S. Ontario, the terrestrial tiger lily (orange - tiger colored) is an abundant grower in virtually any well-drained soil. In Saskatchewan, they seem to have a completely different (red) plant they call a tiger lily. -- derek |
#6
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"Gareeeİ" wrote in message ... LOL, Kathy! No luck getting more of them.. they sold out in about an hour yesterday. Anyone know if you cut the flower off, if they'll regrow one the same year? (some were damaged by the winds) ======================== Some rebloom like Stella D'Ora (sp?) and others only bloom once in the spring. I have both types. But you never know.... -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#7
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"Derek Broughton" wrote in message
... In Saskatchewan, they seem to have a completely different (red) plant they call a tiger lily. This is the red variety.... -- Gareee's Homepage: http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine.../mainframe.htm Remove Delicious spam to reply |
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