Re: breeder's daylilies and daffodils
Diane, I hit the send button a little too quickly this morning. I should
probably have explained that the no-name daylilies are not necessarily poor
daylilies. Most daylily hybridizers have certain goals in mind and very
often bypass those that do not promise to meet or further their goals. It
is a certainty that every hybridizer trashes plants that would probably be
great plants. I think there is a difference between buying seedlings from
a small hybridizer who is offering the plants that didn't make the last cut
and buying seedlings that WFF bought from Who Knows without any clue about
the selection process. Maybe the selection process involves nothing
further than the hybrizer being offered cash for anything with roots.
Gail Korn
Wayne, Nebr.
www.gardenperennials.homestead.com/gardenperennials.html