Old House Gardens
From America’s Expert Source for Heirloom Flower Bulbs
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WHY GROW LILIES? – Lilies bring height, fragrance, and drama to the summer garden, and most are long-lived perennials.

LILY HISTORY – Minoan wall paintings from 1600 BC show Lilium chalcedonicum, and the Romans carried herbal L. candidum throughout their empire. Learn more.

TIPS FOR SUCCESS – Most lilies like their heads in the sun and feet in the shade. To learn more – including how to protect from animalsclick here.

OTHER “LILIES” – Many flowers are called lilies that aren’t. For a list of 250, click here.

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SUMMER PERFUMES        Sampler
The fragrance of lilies wafting through your garden on a warm summer night is an unforgettable pleasure. Sniff 4 different, easy favorites. For zones 5-7S/9WC only.

For 2, 3, or more of each variety, order more samplers.

CO39Add to basket:1/$18.502/$373/$55.504/$745/$92.50
LUSCIOUS LILIES        Sampler
Enrich your summer garden with the lush color and fragrance of heirloom lilies! We’ll send 5 easy classics including our 2003 Bulb of the Year, tough and gorgeous ‘Black Beauty’. For zones 5-7S/9WC only.

For 2, 3, or more of each variety, order more samplers.

CO29Add to basket:1/$25.502/$513/$76.504/$1025/$127.50
AFRICAN QUEEN, 1958
It’s not just an immortal movie, it’s a fabulous lily, too! Chocolate-bronze buds on tall, strong stems open to big, summery, amber-orange-copper trumpets that are swooningly fragrant. Vigorous and adaptable, 5-6 feet, mid-summer blooming, zones 5-8bS/10WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
LL35Add to basket:3/$13.755/$2210/$4125/$9350/$172
BLACK BEAUTY, 1957
Though absolutely gorgeous – with 15-40 turk’s-cap flowers of dark raspberry narrowly edged in silver – ‘Black Beauty’ is even more prized for its wonderful vigor and long life in all sorts of gardens. In fact, you’ll often hear it called “indestructible.” (It’s even lily-beetle resistant, researchers say.) The first NALS Hall of Fame lily and our Heirloom Bulb of the Year for fall 2003, it’s a concensus choice for one of the 20th century’s very best. Sturdy 5-7 foot stems, mid-summer, zones 5-7S/10WC, from Holland. Chart to compare. To view our five-year-old clump of ‘Black Beauty’ in front of the Old House Gardens barn, click here.
LL11Add to basket:3/$15.755/$2510/$4725/$10750/$197
CITRONELLA, 1958
Graceful, easy, and inexpensive, this wildflowery classic has been a Top 5 favorite in recent popularity polls of the North American Lily Society. Bred by Oregon’s legendary Jan de Graaff, it has all the charms of a wild lily, with slender, lemon-yellow, turk’s-cap flowers sprinkled with charming poppy seed dots. 4-5 feet, zones 4-8bS/10WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
LL27Add to basket:3/$9.755/$15.5010/$2925/$6650/$122
L. pumilum, CORAL LILY, 1812
Just 2-3 feet tall, this pixie lily has glossy, red-to-orange flowers that are bright but never gaudy. Native to Siberia, it thrives in steamy Charleston, too, and though it can be short-lived, it self-sows eagerly. Aka L. tenuifolium, Siberian lily, early summer, 2-3 feet, z. 4-8aS/10WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
LL07Add to basket:3/$10.505/$16.5010/$3125/$7150/$131
L. dauricum, DAHURIAN LILY, 1804        New
From the Siberian province of Dauria, this tough, bright, very early lily brings a splash of summer’s brilliance to iris season. Also known as L. umbellatum, it was grown in Japanese gardens for centuries and used to breed a host of similar, now mostly extinct Victorian favorites known as L. x elegans, L. x thunbergianum, and L. x hollandicum, as well as Isabella Preston’s famous Stenographer hybrids. Best in acidic soils, 2 1/2 feet, zones 4b-7bS/9WC, from Oregon. Chart to compare.
LL40Add to basket:3/$12.505/$2010/$37
EXCELSIOR, 1952
Splash grenadine into a tall, icy glass of lemonade, add a cherry, and you’ll be pretty darn close to the sunrise-in-Key-West coloring of ‘Excelsior’. The first time it bloomed here, we felt as if we’d stumbled into a big summer party. And it’s intoxicatingly fragrant. Party on! Oriental, mid-summer blooming, 4 feet, zones 5-7S/9WC, from Holland. Chart to compare.
LL36Add to basket:3/$16.255/$2610/$48.5025/$109.5050/$203
L. formosanum, FORMOSA LILY, 1918
This easy, heat-loving beauty looks like a very tall, very slender Easter lily and smells even sweeter. It bears up to 12 narrow trumpets atop 5-7 foot stalks in late summer and seed-pod candelabras all winter. Introduced in 1880 from Taiwan (where it’s now endangered), it didn’t catch on till re-introduced by E.H. Wilson in 1918. Some say it’s hardy in zone 5, but we guarantee it for 6b-9S/10WC only. In the right spot it self-sows happily and can bloom from seed its first year. From Georgia and Michigan. (For more rich fragrance for warm climates, see Roman hyacinths and antique freesia.) Chart to compare.
LL28Add to basket:1/$10.253/$285/$4410/$8225/$185
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536 Third St., Ann Arbor, MI 48103.
phone: 734-995-1486
fax: 734-995-1687
charlie@oldhousegardens.com
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