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Stare gazer
Stare gazer







stare gazer
  1. #Stare gazer skin#
  2. #Stare gazer full#

#Stare gazer full#

It does best in full sun in the Midwest but will tolerate partial shade. The bulbs should be planted deeply in the container and overplanted with annuals. This hybrid can also be grown in containers and is fairly easy to force. They also look very impressive rising from a bed of ferns or baby’s breath ( Gypsophila) or combined with Phlox paniculata ‘Bright Eyes’ (light pink flowers with a dark pink eye) for a monochromatic color scheme. One suggestion is to combine the purple spikes of Agastache with the pink lily flowers. Lilies do well grown with other low, shallow-rooted plants that help hide the sometimes bare lower stems and keep the roots cool. For the best effect, place them in groups of 3-5 (or more).

stare gazer

This lily is a superb addition to both formal and informal gardens, combined with roses and many other flowers. Once all the flowers on a stem have finished blooming, cut the stem just below the inflorescence, leaving a much foliage as possible, to make sure all the plant’s energy is directed back into the bulb rather than into forming seeds. Anthers should be removed from cut flowers.

#Stare gazer skin#

The orange pollen can stain skin and clothing. However, the orange pollen can stain clothing and skin, so if used as cut flowers it is advisable to cut off the anthers. The satiny flowers have a strong, pleasant fragrance, and make excellent cut flowers (and are heavily utilized by the florist trade). The mainly crimson tepals (3 petals and 3 sepals which all look very similar) are edged in pink and spotted with darker red. The flowers of this hybrid are an elegant combination of pink, red and white with reflexed tips and long stamens with heavy orange anthers. This hybrid blooms earlier than many other Oriental lilies. In mid-summer, 4-12 flowers are produced on the end of each stem. The reflexed tepals are crimson edged with pink. Remove the dying foliage in fall, cutting the stems off at ground level (or leaving some showing so you will know where they are in the spring before the new growth emerges). The lance-shaped leaves alternate up the stems, with the lower ones often falling off as the plants grow taller. They have strong stems and rarely need staking. The upright plants can grow to 6 feet tall, although usually they remain much shorter (3-4 feet). Like most true lilies (Lilium spp.), these herbaceous perennials die back to the ground in winter and send up a new stems from the bulb each spring.

stare gazer

There are now many other cultivars with upward-facing flowers in a variety of colors.īulbs produce strong new stems each spring (L) that rarely need staking (R). The flowers of plants in the Oriental lily group tend to hang down, but this complex auratum-speciosum cross of unknown parentage was noteworthy because of its upward facing flowers, hence the name referencing looking at the heavens. The cultivar ‘Stargazer’ was a breakthrough in lily breeding when it was introduced by hybridizer Mr. One of the most common Oriental lilies and one of the easiest to grow, this reliable garden performer is hardy in zones 4-9.

stare gazer

The crimson cultivar ‘Stargazer’ is a popular hybrid with large, showy flowers that make it a showstopper when in bloom. Oriental lilies are renowned for their delightful perfume and flamboyantmid- to late-summer blooms.









Stare gazer