Lycoris haywardii

AT A GLANCE
Latin name: Lycoris haywardii
Common name: Electric surprise lily
Flowers: Clusters of bright pink, tipped with
blue-purple
Mature size: Foliage to 12” and flowers to 24”
Spacing: 6”
Hardiness: Zones 6-9
Soil: Well-drained
Exposure: Late afternoon shade is best.
Water usage: Medium
Sources:
http://www.brentandbeckysbulbs.com/ and
http://www.bdlilies.com/
You might be familiar with the spider lily
(Lycoris radiata) that is naturalized across the state, but did you
know that there are other species that do just as well here? I didn’t
know that either, until several years back, when I ran across Scott
Ogden’s Garden Bulbs of the South book. Needless to say, my
credit card suffered some severe damage that day, as I went scrambling
across the Internet searching for these ultimate “nah-nah” plants. You
know -- the ones that make your neighbors go, “WOW! What’s that?” I
think every garden should have a few, and I can think of none easier to
grow than Lycoris.
This
particular one grows much like the more-familiar L. radiata, in
that the foliage appears in late fall to winter and grows through
spring, then disappears with the first warm days of early summer. Then
SURPRISE! About late August, it shoots up bright magenta-pink flowers
tipped with purple-blue. (Our regular red spider lilies don’t usually
flower until mid- to late September, depending on when the rains finally
begin.) Another plus: L. haywardii handles the heat of Texas
and the South in general better than red spider lily and will grow all
the way into Zone 6.
So why don’t all gardeners have this in their
yards? Because it can be harder to find than gold at the end of the
rainbow! I found mine at
http://www.plantdelights.com/, but they are sold out this year. You
can also find them at
http://www.telosrarebulbs.com/. I recommend doing a Web search and
buying the first ones you run across. If you can’t find this one, be
assured that almost all of the Lycoris varieties do well in Texas, so be
brave and buy a surprise lily for your yard! By the way, no, you can’t
have some of mine. I’m guarding them preciously!
About the author: Jimmy Turner is
the senior director of gardens at the Dallas Arboretum. Visit
http://www.dallasplanttrials.org/ for more information on his
trials.
L. haywardii is actually a cross between
the more familiar L. squamigera and L. radiata pumila.
It's been around this country since 1948, but isn't as well known as the
parent plants. |