From Lilies for English Gardens by Gertrude Jekyll:
“[Remembering] that our garden Lilies come from all countries in the northern half of the temperate world, from valleys, mountains, rocky heights, and swamps, we must be prepared for the fact that their young growths pierce the ground at very different dates, and that, though no doubt each Lily in its own place comes out of the ground at the fittest season for its new growth, when we put them into our gardens we cannot suit them with the exact weather and temperature and altitude that they would expect in their own homes.”
From Notes on Lilies and Their Culture by Alexander Wallace:
“I have been through swamps in which it grew seven feet high, with from ten to twenty flowers…. You will nearly always see the old dry stalk standing about four inches from the new shoot, and anyone knowing the habits of this Lily, can dig it any time after flowering, before frost, from the old dry flower-stems. They grow most abundantly among thickly matted roots in peaty swamps, where it is almost impossible to dig them, except with a sharp hatchet and very strong spade.”
Hello!
This is the ninth of ten posts in my “Lilies on Black Backgrounds” series. The previous posts in this series are:
Lilies on Black Backgrounds: A Photo Project (1 of 10)
Lilies on Black Backgrounds (2 of 10)
Lilies on Black Backgrounds (3 of 10)
Lilies on Black Backgrounds (4 of 10)
Lilies on Black Backgrounds (5 of 10)
Lilies on Black Backgrounds (6 of 10)
Lilies on Black Backgrounds (7 of 10)
Lilies on Black Backgrounds (8 of 10)
These last two posts feature lilies among those generally described as swamp lilies.
You may remember them from their off-screen cameo appearances in such fine films as Swamp Thing, or possibly (or not) as the inspiration for facehugger baby-pods in any of the Alien movies.
Thanks for taking a look!