My Colorado Kids

Faculty comes back to work tomorrow (except me – because the boss gets to work all summer 😉 ) Still, I had 40 cultivators in bloom today.  Last year at this time, I was having surgery in a week, in-process with interviewing for this job . . . and I had only a handful of daylilies.  There were none left to bloom.  And, mid-August, the blog dropped into nothingness until poinsettia time.   It is Jugust in my yard – my poinsettias look like it’s June and my daylilies think it is July . . . and faculty come back to work tomorrow.

Anyway – I still have 5ish that have scapes and have not bloomed yet and a lot with buds left – this blog season is not close to being over yet.  So, what to talk about today?  Well, I was going to talk about my daylilies with Colorado names.  A couple are in bloom today – but let’s look at the summer.

Cripple Creek is a golden Ned Roberts spider that I assume is named for the gold rush town of Cripple Creek in Colorado.  Ned, the hybridizer, lived fairly near Cripple Creek, CO.

CrippleCreek8.7.1.jpg

Cripple Creek – 2019

I believe Echo Canyon is named for a canyon near the Royal Gorge.  Ned Roberts lived closeby in Colorado Springs.

facebook_1564639533959

Echo Canyon – 2019

Glen Eyrie IS a place in Colorado Springs – no doubt about it!  It is an old castle and new conference center.  Another Ned Roberts spider.

GlenEyrie8.1.1.jpg

Glen Eyrie 2019

Hesperus is the name of a sacred (to the Navajo) mountain in the San Juan Mountain Range near my home.  I have no idea if the cultivator was named after the mountain, but I like the theory enough that I bought the daylily.

Hesperus7.27.1.jpg

Hesperus – 2019

Mount Echo Sunrise – I am guessing this is named after Echo Mountain that is the tallest mountain visible from Denver.  It is a guess because it is another Ned Roberts daylily.

MountEchoSunrise7.22.1.jpg

Mount Echo Sunrise – 2019

Rocky Mountain Pals was named for the folks at the University Cancer Center in Denver – there Ned Roberts went for treatment later in his life.  At least that is the story I was told.

RMF7.25.1.jpg

Rocky Mountain Pals – 2019

The Colorado Kid is named after the movie – but when I saw the name early in my place name and blue daylily addiction, she had to be mine.  She is the mascot of this blog!

TheColoradoKid7.16.1.jpg

The Colorado Kid – 2019

 

A Watched Pot

So, this was my camping weekend. And, I’ve had 5 Premiere blooms since my last post. I want to say something before I share them. I had over 30 still in bloom. I have 5 or 6 with scapes that have not bloomed yet. I could possibly get late scapes. I’m at 85% bloom rate – anticipate low 90’s. This week, my regular hours start. It’s going to get crazy. I hope to photograph those that are open before I leave but many don’t open until 9 or 10 AM. They are pretty cooked by 2 PM, so we will see how this goes. Crazy late cycle.

Two brand new blooms on Friday. Cripple Creek – a golden flower that I assume Ned Roberts named after the Colorado gold rush town. Coberg Fright Wig – from back when I bought crazy names. Tried to die, but I finally got it thriving 4 years later.

Cripple Creek 8/2

Coberg Fright Wig 8/2

And, today some new blooms for 2019 on old favorites. Western Sandstone and Pizza Crust. They look and act enough alike that I looked up parentage a couple years ago and they are kin.

Pizza Crust 8/4

Western Sandstone 8/4

Orange Vols is probably my favorite orange.

Orange Vols 8/4

Colorado Day: My Top 10 Red Daylilies

August 1st brought a cool day with rain.  School starts next week, work is buzzing.  But, I tell myself, we are still 6 weeks from fall and the short day, cool seasons. August 1st is also Colorado Day.  Colorado means red.  So, since I have no new cultivators today (but still 50+ in bloom), I thought I would share my top 10 red daylilies.  Here they are in no particular order:

RubySpider7.21.2.jpg

Ruby Spider – one of my oldest daylilies – 2019

Baja7.27.1.jpg

Baja – another oldy but goodie (looks like velvet) – 2019

Route66.7.15.1.jpg

Route 66 – nice colors (she brings to mind my spring road trip) – 2019

MayaChaCha7.30.1.jpg

Maya Cha Cha – This is for my Granddaughter, Maia! – 2019

ApacheBandana7.25.1.jpg

Apache Bandana – an eye-catching flower – 2019

facebook_1563766594821.jpg

Santa’s Pants – a jolly old soul – 2019

 

FoxEars7.29.2.jpg

Fox Ears – I simply love the shape! – 2019

NursesStethoscope7.31.1.jpg

Nurse’s Stethoscope – I helped name this one (my legacy) – 2019

NavajoRodeo7.25.1.jpg

Navajo Rodeo – I like the distinctive shape and the name – 2019

KachinaFirecracker7.30.1.jpg

Kachina Firecracker – looks like red ribbons – 2019

What’s your favorite?

50 Startling Southwest Spider Daylilies!

Only 40 something daylilies today and no Premiers.  So, it leaves time to talk about some of my daylily categories.  I have talked a lot about my Ned Roberts spiders.  I originally started collecting them after seeing Kokopelli on the Lily Auction – I love the Southwest and had to have her (I got the bid)!  From there, I added more = lots more.  At first, it was all fully Southwest names.  Then, I gathered some animal and insect names to my Ned collection.  And, some stellar names.  IDK, is Dancing Maiden a name from the Southwest?

So, tonight, I will show you my purely Southwest named daylilies – the obvious names from the Southwest.  But, first, Mildred Mitchell had an extra petal today – a genetic flaw that made her look pretty cool.

MildredMitchell7.31.1.jpg

 

OK – Here are my Southwest Ned Roberts spiders. (These are the ones that have bloomed the last two years.  Mostly this year, except Kokopelli did not bloom this year – which is unusual).

Adios7.31.1

Adios Albuquerque – 2019

ApacheBandana7.15.1.jpg

Apache Bandana – 2019

ApacheBeacon7.25.1

Apache Beacon – 2019

AztecFirebird7.23.1.jpg

Aztec Firebirds – 2019

BlackArrowhead7.30.2

Black Arrowhead – 2019

ChacoCanyon7.15.1.jpg

Chaco Canyon – 2019

CheyenneEyes7.21.1.jpg

Cheyenne Eyes – 2019

ChiefFourFingers7.2.1

Chief Four Fingers – 2019

ChokecherryMountain7.28.1

Chokecherry Mountain – 2019

ComanchePrincess7.27.1.jpg

Comanche Princess – 2019

CoralTaco7.24.1

Coral Taco – 2019

DesertIcicle7.25.2

Desert Icicle

DreamCatcher7.27.1

Dream Catcher

facebook_1564639533959

Echo Canyon – 2019

FeatherWoman7.27.1

Feather Woman – 2019

GhostRanch6.29..1

Ghost Ranch – 2019

GlenEyrie7.29.2

Glen Eyrie – 2019

HappyHopi7.31.2

Happy Hopi – 2019

Iktomi7.26.1.jpg

Iktomi – 2019

KachinaFirecracker7.30.1

Kachina Firecracker – 2019

Kokopelli6.3.5.JPG

Kokopelli – 2018

LandofEnchantment7.13.1.jpg

Land of Enchantment – 2019

LaughingFeather7.21.1.jpg

Laughing Feather – 2019

MamaCuna7.27.2.jpg

Mama Cuna – 2019

MayaChaCha7.25.1.jpg

Maya Cha Cha – 2019

MedicineFeather7.15.1.jpg

Medicine Feather – 2019

MountEchoSunrise7.22.1

Mount Echo Sunrise – 2019

NavajoCurls7.24.1.jpg

Navajo Curls – 2018

NavajoGreyHills7.27.1.jpg

Navajo Grey Hills – 2019

NavajoRodeo7.25.1

Navajo Rodeo – 2019

OjodeDios7.24.1

Ojo de Dios – 2019

O

PinkEnchlada7.21.1.jpg

Pink Enchalada – 2019

PinkRainDance7.14.1

Pink Rain Dance – 2019

PurpleCornDancer7.25.2.jpg

Purple Corndancer – 2018

PurpleManyFaces7.25.2.jpg

Purple Many Faces – 2019

PurpleThunderbird7.30.2

Purple Thunderbird – 2019

SantaFeChristmas7.25.1.jpg

Santa Fe Christmas

ShapeShifter7.31.1.jpg

Shape Shifter – 2019

SkinWalker7.25.1

Skinwalker – 2019

SpiritoftheMorning7.30.1.jpg

Spirit of the Morning – 2019

StarOverMilagro7.26.1.jpg

Star Over Milagro – 2019

TacoTwister7.28.1

Taco Twister – 2019

Talon7.28.1

Talon – 2019

TruchasSunrise7.31.3.jpg

Truchas Sunrise – 2019

TwirlingPinata7.22.1.jpg

Twirling Pinata – 2018

WildRoseFandago7.16.1.jpg

Wild Rose Fandango – 2019

ZuniEye7.22.1.jpg

Zuni Eye – 2019

Zuni7.26.2.jpg

Zuni Thunderbird – 2019

 

Singing the Blues

Why is it that we always want what we can’t have?   Early in my daylily addiction, when I had planted my first mail-order roots, I became fascinated with blue daylilies.  Well, actually, daylilies lack the genetics to make blue.  So, you know, I became infatuated with “near blue” daylilies whose mosiac genetics lead them to look blue.  This predates my addiction to Ned Roberts spiders.  All my near blues are in pots and come into the back porch for the winter because they are evergreen daylilies and prefer warmer temps.  My near blues have a special spot in the front yard where the pots live from March-October.

So, one of my Premiers today is a new near blue added last year called Baby Blue Eyes.  I honestly thought I had killed her because the drought hit and, after my skin cancer surgery, I just gave up on the yard.  I kept her on the porch, though, despite the fact she looked dried up.  And, come spring, she came to life.  I love the colors – she is a true near blue.

BabyBlueEyes7.30.3.jpg

Baby Blue Eyes 7/30

I am going to show off my other near blues because their bloom cycle is nearing an end.  My favorite is The Colorado Kid.  I was just googling place names to see if there were daylilies with that name – and she popped up.  I think this is year 4 for her – she is our mascot flower.  She had a lot of blooms this year and has a couple of buds left.  Baby Blue Eyes has similar coloring.

TheColoradoKid7.21.1.jpg

The Colorado Kid – July, 2019

 

I also have Blue Beat, an early addition and a nice blue replica.

BlueBeat7.15.1.jpg

Blue Beat – July, 2019

Bluegrass Music is a must-have blue daylily.  I got pretty ripped off by the place I bought her from, but she has paid off with several years of blooms.

BluegrassMusic7.21.1.jpg

Bluegrass Music – July, 2019

Mildred Mitchell is an older cultivator, but she caught my eye as having a nice blue -looking color in the right light.

MildredMitchell7.15.1.jpg

Mildred Mitchell – July, 2019

Prairie Blue Eyes is not in my blue section, but she also has a blue hue at times.

PrairieBlueEyes7.5.1.jpg

Prairie Blue Eyes – July, 2019

I got Heron’s Cove as a near blue – but moved her because she rarely looks blue – but occasionally, I see a bit of a bluish tint in her.

HeronsCove7.24.1.jpg

Heron’s Cove – July, 2019

OK – So I had two other Premiers today – both Ned Roberts spiders. Golden Eclipse showed her first bloom in my yard today.  I have had her 2-3 years.  The grower is someone I got a lot of my Neds from and she said it was an ugly brown color and to be sure I really wanted it.  I think she is a pretty gold – a unique color for a daylily.

GoldenEclipse7.30.3.jpg

Golden Eclipse 7/30

And, big bloom Purple Thunderbird is back this year.

PurpleThunderbird7.30.2.jpg

Purple Thunderbird 7/30

I will be out of premiers soon with three in one day.  I maybe have 6-12 left in my whole yard.  Honestly, I will be glad for it to slow down.  I had 58 today.

 

 

The Daylilies of Winter

The heat of July is upon us!  I got stung by a wasp last night and I get a local, allergic reaction.  So, my hand is red, swollen, blistered and itches horribly.  Summer . . . one of my favorite seasons.  Yet, those bugs . . .

So, to shift thoughts to times where wasps are non-existent, let me shift to our one and only Premier daylily bloom today. (I still had almost 60 in bloom).  Her name is Candy Cane Dreams and I got her as a bonus with Santa’s Pants.  I had no idea where to put her, so she is in the barrel planter with Black-Eyed Susan and Stella.  She is kind of cool – she does look like Santa’s Pants!

CandyCane7.29.2.jpg

Candy Cane Dreams 7/29

OK – So that always gets me thinking of the winter named daylilies.  Here is Santa’s Pants from a few days ago:

facebook_1563766594821

Santa’s Pants – July 2019

What others that bring to mind winter . . . surely Lime Frost (in bloom today)

LimeFrost7.29.1.jpg

Lime Frost 7/29

And, Black Ice (from a few days ago):

BlackIce7.22.1.jpg

Black Ice – July, 2019

What about Desert Icicle? – here she is from this weekend:

DesertIcicle7.25.2.jpg

Desert Icicle – July, 2019

Santa Fe Christmas, of course, blooming today:

SantaFeChristmas7.29.1.jpg

Santa Fe Christmas 7/29

Oh, and Funny Valentine from a couple weeks ago:

FunnyValentine7.15.1.jpg

Funny Valentine – July, 2019

Orange Flurry from today sounds like snow:

OrangeFlurry7.29.1.jpg

Orange Flurry 7/29

What about Autumn Jewels from today to start to cool off?

AutumnJewels7.29.1.jpg

Autumn Jewels 7/29

I’m feeling cooler already – now for the antihistamine and hopefully some sleep.

 

Daylily Rodeos

Yesterday was our County Rodeo. I go every year.  In fact, when I worked less in the summer and didn’t have so many dog duties, I went almost every evening to some event.  The rodeo signals that summer is on the downside.  I guess we are only 5 weeks into summer, but school starts in a couple of weeks or so.  And, the daylily blooms drop off – which I only had 50+ of today.  That is a drop off of 10-20.

IMG_9469.JPG

Montrose County Ram Rodeo 7.27

Anyway – not a Premier, but Navajo Rodeo looked very pretty for rodeo weekend.  I need to paint her this winter.  IDK which Robert’s daylilies I want to paint the most – but there are a lot.  By far the highest bloom rate of his cultivators.  So many first blooms this year.

 

NavajoRodeo7.28.1.jpg

Navajo Rodeo 7/28

That is my segway to the Premiers for today.  Only two.  The first one is a never bloomed in my yard before Roberts spider named Dancing Maiden.  She looks a lot like Aztec Firebird, except her shape is a little different.  I barely noticed that she was from a different plant!  I should have put her in a different place – but oh, well.

DancingMaiden7.28.1.jpg

Dancing Maiden on the right, Aztec Firebird to the left 7/28

And, I got my first ever bloom on Sanctuary in the Clouds.  I got this daylily for the woman who runs the animal sanctuary (Black Canyon Animal Sanctuary) where my dogs (and one cat) came from.  I ordered this for her the year I adopted Kachina – so 2016.  It came with lots of fans and I saved one.  Anyway – finally, she blooms!

Sanctuary7.28.2.jpg

Sanctuary in the Clouds 7/28

Tomorrow is Monday – so squeeze blooms between my workday! Better get to bed.

Show Me Your Stethoscope!

I am a nurse and a midwife.  Remember the “show me your stethoscope” incident on The View a few years back?  It took over my Facebook feed for a few weeks – nurses united!  During that time, I was pretty active on the American Daylily Society Facebook page.  I had an idea – they should name a daylily Nurse’s Stethoscope.  Well, one of the hybridizers who was also in healthcare picked-up on the suggestion and registered a daylily with that name.

It was a pretty daylily – beautiful, I thought.  Except it was new on the market so out of my price range.  Summer before last, I finally caved and bought it.  It thrived last summer and gave me quite a show of blooms.  But, she was one of the ones who struggled because of the cold, wet spring.  Her scapes died back after sprouting.  I put her in a smaller pot and moved her to the front yard for the summer.   I crossed my fingers.  She is coming back enough to have a couple buds.  Once she blooms, I will fertilize.  Glad to have her as one of my premiers today!  My little daylily legacy!

NursesStethoscope7.27.1.jpg

Nurse’s Stethoscope 7/27

Another Premier was Kachina Firecracker, another Ned Roberts spider.  I was putting her in my new daylily garden three years ago when I adopted my rescue dog, Kachina.  There were two daylilies – Kachina Firecracker and Kachina Dancer.  Kachina was a stray before going to the sanctuary, so they gave her the name Tina due to her small size (7 pounds of anxiety!)  I was trying to think of a name for her that rhymed with Tina.  It was the daylilies named Kachina that synapsed my choice of names for my mutt.

KachinaFirecracker7.27.1.jpg

Kachina Firecracker 7/27

Last Premier is Baja – an old favorite.  One of my early daylilies that just keeps coming back every summer.

Baja7.27.1.jpg

Baja 7/27

I do find the taking photos of 70+ flowers every day for a few weeks is exhausting on top of the blogging.  I start to dream of fall hikes in the canyon and watching Call the Midwife.  For now, we will see what tomorrow brings.  We had another gusher monsoon today, so I will see what is up when I awaken from much-needed sleep.

Daylily Photobombs

The peak lives on with 72 blooms today.  One of the things about photographing so many daylilies before I have to leave for work is that I get in a rush.  I focus on the flower and hit the shutter button.  Sometimes, when I am editing later, I find stuff that I didn’t notice at the time.

My favorite photobombs have other daylilies that I didn’t notice in the background – like Happy Hopi today:

HappyHopi7.26.2.jpg

Happy Hopi with friends Laughing Feather and Zuni Thunderbird 7/26

And, the most common photobombs are when I cut off a petal in the shot by a lot.  Why am I struggling to get photos of Navajo Grey Hills?

NavajoGreyHills7.26.2.jpg

Navajo Grey Hills 7/26

Of course, there are occasionally cat photobombs:

SkinWalker7.25.1.jpg

Skinwalker and my cat, Sokasbai – 7/25

Or, dog photobombs:

BlueBeat7.25.1.jpg

Blue Beat and my dog, Maizzy – 7/25

The most embarrassing, though, are the foot photobombs.  The flower is at a weird angle, so you try to bend over so you can get a front shot.  What was I thinking?

BlackIce7.26.1.jpg

Black Ice and my feet – 7/26

OK – so what about Premiers.  Only three today.  The pace slows a bit, although I saw my neighbors at dinner and the first thing they talked about was my giant daylilies.  So, it isn’t over yet!

Nona’s Garnet Spider was a bonus.  She hasn’t been a consistent bloomer but is putting on a good show of buds this year.

NonasSpider7.26.1.jpg

Nona’s Garnet Spider – 7/26

Autumn Jewels . . . I think this was a bonus, too.  She is related to El Desperado.  I had a huge El Desperado for years but lost it to the weird, cold, wet spring.  I lost a couple and several had setbacks . . . but so many are blooming this year that haven’t before or the regulars have a higher bud count than usual.  It’s interesting the yin and yang of this year.  Anyway – I got a new El Desperado and it is just putting up scapes now.  I like both of these cultivators.

AutumnJewels7.26.2.jpg

Autumn Jewels – 7/26

And, Nearly Wild is another bonus plant – she looks like her ancestor, the ditch lily or Fulva.  I am sure that is where she gets her name.

NearlyWild7.26.2.jpg

Nearly Wild – 7/26

It is raining, again.  We will see what that brings.

 

 

Daylily Who’s Who????

Another amazing day with over 60 cultivators in bloom.  I blogged the other day about knowing my flowers by name tags, mapping, and photographic surroundings.  Well, I blew it on one of my Roberts spiders.  It all feels so rushed with being at work most of the day – I have been home with my daylilies for the last 4 summers.  That is when my collection grew.  Now, I rush around in the morning to get pictures and that is really the only time I see these beauties.  Hopefully, in a couple years, I can reduce my summer hours.

Until then, my flub was stellar.  That is, both daylilies referred to the sky.  Seriously, looking at them, they totally look like their names.  I don’t know how I got them mixed up other than taking 80-100 photos off my camera, editing and organizing in the evening . . . and travel, and two special needs dogs, and work.  Well, stellar flubs happen.  Here they are both in bloom the same day (today), which helped.

StarOverMilagro7.24.1.jpg

Star over Milagro 7/24

TruchasSunrise7.24.1.jpg

Truchas Sunrise 7/24

So, now that I have confessed, here are today’s Premiers:

Mama Cuna is another Roberts daylily – it is good to see her, again! She resembles Star over Milagro – I need to look up and see if they share genes in common.

Indian Sky is probably not the real Indian Sky, although it was sold as such.  It was one of my early online purchases – it fit my Southwest theme. I think it is still really pretty.

Rosie’s Red was another bonus daylily – and one I really like.  The deep red color is beautiful and I like the shape.

MamaCuna7.24.3.jpg

Mama Cuna 7/24

IndianSky7.24.1.jpg

Indian Sky 7/24

RosiesRed7.24.2.jpg

Rosie’s Red