Can you plant daylilies and lavender together?

Can you plant daylilies and lavender together?

If you have day lilies or lavender, you know they’re both powerhouse bloomers. If you wonder whether you can plant them together, you’re in luck. Although there are a few small differences in their culture, the two perennials perform beautifully together.

What is the most beautiful daylily?

One of the top favorite daylilies, award-winner Hemerocallis ‘Red Volunteer’ is a midseason Daylily which produces masses of extra large, 7 in. wide (18 cm), rich red velvety flowers with a contrasting golden-yellow throat. Blooming in mid to late summer, this clump-forming deciduous perennial grows up to 30 in.

What is the longest blooming daylily?

‘Miss Amelia’ If you’re looking for a prolific long-bloomer, this is your daylily. Each plant has loads of fragrant blooms for more than three months! In addition, ‘Miss Amelia’ multiplies quickly, so you’ll have a beautiful mass in no time.

Where is the best place to plant a daylily?

full sun
Daylilies should be planted in full sun or partial shade that receives 4-6 hours of sun per day. Despite the preference of full sun, occasionally colorful daylily blooms can be found under the shade of tall trees. Wherever some shade is present, the daylily flowers will face away from it toward open sky.

What should I plant in front of daylilies?

Some good flowers to plant with daylilies include:

  • Echinacea.
  • Lavender.
  • Shasta daisy.
  • Bergamot.
  • Phlox.
  • Black eyed Susan.
  • Baby’s breath.
  • Yarrow.

What plants work well with daylilies?

Echinacea, Perovskia, Achillea, Coreopsis, Phlox, Salvia, and Buddleia are wonderful daylily companions and they will bring your garden alive with the flitting of butterflies and hummingbirds. Ornamental grasses make an outstanding backdrop for daylilies. Color From Foliage!

Are there purple daylilies?

Reblooming Daylily ‘Purple D’oro’ (Hemerocallis ‘Purple D’oro) flowers all summer and into fall with show-stopping magenta-purple blooms, with chartreuse-yellow throats. One of the longest blooming daylilies, it makes a perfect addition to a border, mixed bed, or container.

What can I plant instead of daylilies?

6 Native Replacements for Daylilies

  • Ontario Blazing Star (Liatris cylindracea) Illinois Wildflower Link.
  • White Wild Indigo (Baptisia alba) Illinois Wildflower Link.
  • Orange Coneflower (Rudbeckia fulgida ) Wildflower.org Link.
  • Hairy Beardstongue (Penstemon hirsutus) Wildflower.org Link.

How do you get daylilies to bloom all summer?

Deadhead daylilies regularly to encourage more flowers. Remove spent blooms every day, and cut the flowering stem back to the ground after all blooms disappear. Because daylilies have thick stems, the best way to deadhead them without breaking off any surrounding blooms is to use sharp scissors or pruners.

Should daylilies be cut back after flowering?

Daylilies are one of the easiest perennials to grow and they can put on a great flower show to boot. Flower stalks may be cut back after all the buds have bloomed. Remove spent foliage in late fall. Cut back leaves to within a few inches from the ground, also in late fall.

How do you keep daylilies blooming all summer?

Daylilies are strong performers in the garden. If you deadhead them (cut off the old flower stalks at the base) you will get even more blossoms than if you leave the stalks up to form seed pods which over the summer will ripen and burst in the fall.

What pairs well with daylilies?

author

Back to Top