These are photos of the orange
daylilies, which have been blooming since about the first of July at our mountain home.
This lily is
a species of a daylily called Hemerocallis fulva, and has many common names, including
orange daylily, tawny daylily and the “ditch lily.” These lilies came from a friend, who was thinning them out and told me to help myself to as many as I
wanted.
The flowers open and greet the morning with their six-part petals facing the sun and close around dark, never to open again therefore the “daylily” name. With many flower buds on each stem and many stems in a clump, these lilies may bloom for several weeks.The orange petals often have ruffled edges and a stripe down the center of each petal and maybe doubled. With all the rain this summer in the mountains, they have thrived and are very showy and attention getting.
The flowers open and greet the morning with their six-part petals facing the sun and close around dark, never to open again therefore the “daylily” name. With many flower buds on each stem and many stems in a clump, these lilies may bloom for several weeks.The orange petals often have ruffled edges and a stripe down the center of each petal and maybe doubled. With all the rain this summer in the mountains, they have thrived and are very showy and attention getting.