INVENTORY LIST FOR SUMMER 2011 ***DAYLILIES ONLY***

These are daylilies that are grown here on our farm.  They can be dug and shipped or dug to order at the nursery.  All of them are grown in our field and recieve average care.  Those marked with blue asterisks are spider and unusual form types.  Those with red asterisks were bred here and are exclusive to us and pink asterisks denote double forms.  Daylilies bred here are not currently registered with the American Hemerocallis society, but all plants that are sold are lined out divisions of the original plant and will grow and bloom true to the description of the original plant.  Please note--we are in Zone 5B--Northern Indiana.  Our winters can go down to minus 25 and summer temps can be in the low 100's with very high relative humidity.  Our ground freezes in winter--frost line in this area is about 4 feet deep.  Cultivars that were bred here have not been trialed in other parts of the country, but it is safe to say that if your seasons approximate ours here (zones 4 through 6 for example) I am comfortable in saying my "homebred" babies will do well for you.  A great many of the daylilies we carry are classed as late to very late.  For comparison--the Mid late varieties typically begin to flower about the 4th week in July and continue on through August.  Late bloomers begin about the 3rd or 4th week in August and continue on for 3 to 4 weeks.  Very late varieites begin to flower in early Sept, with some beginning in mid to late Sept.  Most daylilies can be counted on for around 4 weeks of bloom--some longer, and a few for less time.
This list is long and can be kind of hairy to look at.  I will do some breakout pages for my own varieties so its a little easier to look at--but for the whole overall view of the daylilies we sell, here's the Big Picture.

https://docs.google.com/document/d/14dfNth54lyjkbLiax4HlW4OI6OLAQzy2ptOv-BZclz8/edit?hl=en

This is a link to a google doc, which is my 2011 price list.  Please forgive the clunkiness of doing it this way--I am trying my best--but when you combine my computer skills with this very old desktop the result is usually some kind of train wreck.  Click the link and go get some tea--by the time you get back (as long as you are on high speed) it will be there waiting for you. 
I have also created a photo album in picasa of cultivars I have for sale.  These photos were all taken by me here on our property.  They have not been enhanced in any way other than cropping for size and inserting text on each picture to identify it.  There are a few plants in the price list I don't have photos for (we can't be organized ALL the time--can we???) and to see what those cultivars look like, the easiest thing would be to just google or whatever search engine you use for images of the individual cultivars. There are a metric ton of daylily sites on the internet with a lot of photos available, so you should be able to track down what you want to see.