G06 BOA x BG Yellow Seedlings x Insight of White Daylily Evaluation
2018
This year we are only selling our introductions. After a too wet summer in 2016, which led to disease and then a cold winter in 2016-2017 which saw most of the commercial daylilies die out, it was easy to make that decision.
Of note one daylily, Notify Ground Crew handled the disease and cold like a champ. As well its hundreds of babies are alive and thriving while thousands of seedlings and hundreds of cultivars around them died. We have our first introduction in 2018 out of Notify Ground Crew. The nice and tall KC ON A HILL!
On the much shorter side is the drought resistant NEXT YEAR COUNTRY appropriately named for farmers!
2017 Spring Daylily Sales
We will be listing daylilies for sale just as soon as they start greening up! Right now everything is still hiding underground.
Hope you had a good winter and are ready for things to be green and growing!
Fall 2016 and Flowers on Social Media
Just so you know, we are not planning on selling lily bulbs this fall. We are focusing on breeding botrytis resistance lilies only at this time. A big boost was receiving plants from Albert hybridizer Fred Fellner.
Social Media!! If you are interested in what is going on in the garden we are on Facebook and Instagram.
Facebook Lilyfield Farm
Instagram @lilyfieldfarm
Open House July 19, 2016
Mid-May Freeze in a Zone 3 Canadian Garden
A few nights of frost? The daylilies should be fine.
The foliage pictures are of daylilies covered in frost during lots of active growth. As long as the daylilies don’t have scapes with buds on them, they should be fine even if they are laying flat out. In 2015 we had 11 nights of May freezing temps including -5.8 C and -4.4 C. The effects that year were some browning of foliage, see flower pics, and shorter than usual scapes. Despite the cold temperatures in May, we had beautiful blooms and increase on plants. The two flower picture show the foliage on some seedlings later in the year.
Of course the effects will depend on duration of freezing as well as temperature.
The Super Hardy

Stars My Destination, L.Michaels.
The winter of 2013-2014 led to the selection of a few super hardy daylilies for zone 3. No tree, snow, or mulch protection -30C plus windchill. All that was left in the open were these six. Winter 2014-2015 should lead to more discoveries as January had 2 weeks of no snow cover and plus temperature.
Karl suggests that when working with our growing conditions, a medium should be considered instead. Using round straw bales as a snow catch would make a huge difference to chances of a daylily living through winter here. Still it is fun to discover which plants are above the rest when it comes to sheer cold/freeze-thaw hardiness. He has a point, and I will likely choose some sort of winter protection if anything is to thrive in the open. At the same time the test for super hardiness in seedlings and cultivars without any winter protection will continue.
There are two that I would consider close to the above in hardiness, but they had other plants near them that may have contributed to a bit of snow catch.
Botrytis Resistance
It took 40 years before weather conditions were wet enough for botrytis to affect lilies here at the farm in Lucky Lake, Saskatchewan. Since 2010 botrytis resistance has been an obvious goal. Here are three cultivars that show good resistance. Tetraploid pollen used on Iowa Rose results in easy seed. Poorer results on Morden Butterfly. Not Centurion being a diploid asiatic lily is easy to breed with.