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Re: New beds and daylilies


I'd just make sure there is plenty of room between plants to let everything dry off (as much as possible). This was an oddball year weather wise...

I agree. I've been cutting these same daylilies back in the center of the path for about 5 years now with no dire results and actually they all looked
 great until late Sept. This year, however, with all the rain we've had and
the  cool temps must have been perfect for the fungus to get into the open
wounds.  I'll see what happens next year. An online search revealed the
possibility of  that fungus remaining in the soil to do its work in subsequent
years...ai yi  yi...will lift the daylilies next spring...I wonder if I
should use anything to counter the fungus in the soil? Any ideas? I'd sure hate
to have this happen  again next year...and maybe early on too.

Joanie Anderson
35 mi. north of Chicago


In a message dated 8/27/2009 1:21:17 P.M. Central Daylight Time, cherylisaak@comcast.net writes:

Hi,  Cheryl!

Your new bed sounds wonderful, if back breaking. How  much of   different
plants will go in this year? When do you  get your first hard frost in  NH?

North country could be this  weekend; normally, I'll see one by mid October.

   How
about posting some pix of the phases?

anyone on Facebook? I  posted some pictures there.


<<The plan is  to
keep the daylilies that stay here to the small  side or  more
interesting shapes.>>

I ran into an  interesting problem with my daylilies this summer: I have
some (Happy  Returns) flanking a path across a mini-berm. Each summer I
have  to
  cut them back to permit easy walking (my fault...the path's  too narrow).
In  early August about 2/3's of them began to look  ratty as if it were
late
October.  Then, bang, they were gone. I  cut them back to the ground (and
pitched their  remains in the  trash) and they already have 5" leaves
again from
the crowns. I did some online research and it was apparently a fungus
and
by cutting  their leaves back in the center of the pathway I  had opened
the
plants up to invasion and infection. Guess I'll be  re-doing a bed
too...next year:-)

and some just like to be cut  back any way. I know the fungus (a
"rust" IIRC) was huge concern among  breeders and growers.  Just pick
up the plant and move them; they  won't mind....
--
Cheryl Isaak
another day, another rink
growing,  stitching and reading in  NH

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--
Cheryl Isaak
another day, another rink
growing, stitching and reading in NH

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