'Timbercreek Ace'; Lovell, 2004 |
I should note here that as a state employee, I can't accept gifts of over $25 so to the K-State auditors listening in, I checked and a start of 'Timbercreek Ace' is commercially available for under that price...at least from some places. As a 2004 variety, it is, however, both one of my most recent daylilies and one of the pricier ones. I'm grateful to the client for it, especially after reading that a mature plant will have better than 22 buds/scape. What a display this will be someday!
The gorgeous bicolored daylily to the left is an unnamed daylily(#45BO5) bred by a local Hemerocallis activist and breeder, Dr Steve Thien. I obtained it two February's back as the winning bidder in an auction to benefit the K-State University Gardens. It wasn't, therefore a gift to me, but it was a nice gift from Dr. Thien to the Gardens that I "intercepted." Last year, it struggled in the drought, overshadowed by a native Asclepias tuberosa that I allowed to grow too close to it, and it didn't bloom. This year, with the butterfly milkweed cut back, it's doing better and has two nice scapes full of blooms.
Daylilies take a lot of grief from WEE (wild-eyed environmentalists) who disdain non-native plants. While I grow as many native forbs as I can in my pseudo-lawn of native prairie, and allow the self-seeders into my garden beds when I recognize their seedlings, I still appreciate daylilies for their acceptance of the searing summer heat and their bloom during an otherwise dead period in my garden.