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Re: Lily of the Valley
Claire Peters wrote:
> Good Morning.....
>
> My Father gave me a bunch of Lily of the Valley when he thinned his
> garden
> this week.
>
> I was hoping for some info on what they need in the way of sun. I
> have one
> spot that has the morning sun till about noon or so and I have a shady
> spot
> that gets very little sun and so far only hostas and some primroses
> have made
> it their home.
>
> Any help will be appreciated as I have to get these in the ground this
>
> weekend.
>
> Thanx and take care, Claire
>
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Hello Claire,
Here is an extract from the Time-Life Plant Encyclopedia
(http://waffle.nal.usda.gov/agdb/tl_cge.html):
C. majalis (lily of the valley)
The delicate bell-shaped flowers of lily
of the valley perfume woodland
gardens in midspring, and the plant's
foliage then forms a cool green
ground cover or edging in the open shade
of high-branching trees,
vine-covered trellises or sheltered
terraces. In dense shade a carpet of
leaves will grow, but there will be few
flowers. The plants spread rapidly
by underground stems called pips. At
maturity, the plant has two
elliptical leaves, 8 inches long and 1 to
3 inches wide, and a wiry stalk
containing five to eight white 1/4-inch
flowers. In autumn the plants die to
the ground, but they reemerge in spring
for many years. They require
little or no cultivation, are rarely
invasive and tolerate urban smog.
HOW TO GROW. Lily of the valley is hardy
in Zones 3-8. It grows most
luxuriantly in the colder zones and does
best in rich, damp, acid soil. Set
out plants or pips in the fall or early
spring, spacing them 5 inches apart
and covering them with 1 inch of earth.
Although they need little further
care, they will continue to produce more
flowers if covered with a thin
layer of compost in the fall to keep them
from being heaved out of the
ground by frost. To propagate, dig up
rhizomes in the fall after the plant's
foliage yellows or in spring when leaves
emerge, divide them into
sections with at least one pip on each
section, and replant.
Hope this helps, Alex
--
Alex Teller
E-mail: alextell@pacbell.net
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