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Haley_Springs_Farm
Maryville, Tennessee
Member for 5 years
Welcome! Haley Springs Farm is a family farm where hundreds of varieties of divine daylilies find a home. Have fun checking out our cultivars! What will you see here that you love?
373 listings
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373 total
Katelyn Lillie Bachman
Bachman, 2012
An impressive bud-builder and rebloomer with a wide ivory/chartreuse throat. Fertile both ways.
Kensington Plantation
Douglas-C., 2009
This dormant tet has so much class! Fully diamond-dusted blush blooms show a flourish of piecrust ruffles that terminate in a light gold edge. Candelabra branching and instant rebloom. Strong increase and fertile both ways. Needless to say... a favorite!
Kindly Light
Bechtold, 1950
This was the first named cultivar we ever bought- for $5 a clump! How times change. All we knew at the time was that it was spidery and historic. We didn't know that it was a fragrant rebloomer that shows rust resistance and a hint of a pale eye on some days. It still has that time-tested beauty.
Kingdom Bound
Emmerich, 2015
Wow! Hardy habit and massive blooms on tall scapes, with fabulous instant rebloom. Great work, Karol Emmerich!
Knowledgeable Gnome
Salter-E.H., 2003
This wizened 3.5-inch tet is complex and charming! Reblooms well and northern hardy. Very hard to find.
Lacy Doily
Joiner-J., 1999
Such a pretty little thing, Lacy Doily is! Clumps up quickly and puts on a great show, especially with rebloom.
Lady Liz
Lachman, 1983
This graceful daylily has such a huge (and gently demarcated) watermark that blooms give the impression of an edge-no-eye cultivar. Widely branched and northern hardy.
Lady Scarlet
An unregistered introduction apparently by Blooms of Bressingham. We have been impressed by the saturated color and substance of the fragrant 6-inch blooms on 22" scapes on an evergreen plant. Lady Scarlet is a fragrant, reblooming tet.
Lake Norman Spider
Carpenter-K., 1981
A fine daylily that continues to be distinctive over 40 years after introduction. We especially like the gorgeous play between the raspberry cerise of the segments and the melon radiating out of a green throat. Watermarking, striped midribs, crispate petals and curled sepals add bonus points!
Land of Cotton
Joiner, 1991
Last Fool Standing
Selman, 2008
A stunner that has it all- good looks, branching, bud-building, fertility and rebloom! And grows like crazy!
Last Snowflake
Stamile, 2006
Display
Laura Harwood
Harwood, 1997
Laura Harwood's huge chartreuse throat glows freshly in contrast to dramatic, maroon-black petals. She increases quickly to form an arresting clump and a sea of blooms. Wow!
Lavender Echoes
Trimmer-J., 2011
A crisp, lemon-yellow applique contrasts beautifully with veined, two-tone lavender/pink petals and lighter sepals. Good branching! We bought this cultivar from the midwest, so we know it shows hardiness despite being evergreen.
Ledgewood's Dragon Fly
Abajian, 2006
An aptly named, jewel-toned daylily. Stained-glass-like, spatulate petals show dramatic veining and really do resemble dragonfly wings! Reblooms well. Fertile both ways.
Lee's Blue Lagoon
Pickles, 2016
A very fine rebloomer that shows fertility both ways here.
Lemon Persuasion
Mason-M., 2008
Lemon Persuasion is a blush/yellow hardy dormant with massively strong scapes and substantial blooms. Very ruffled edges don't hang up on this early-morning opener. When we got it, we were hoping for surprise rebloom, and have not been disappointed!
Lemon Vista
These pale yellow blooms show up early in the season, and rebloom into summer. 6.5-inch blooms are held on 28 to 30-inch scapes and open early. Dark green foliage shows rust resistance. Evergreen habit and fragrant.
Lemonberry Truffle
Kirchhoff-D., 2000
Lemonberry Truffle often starts out with single blooms and then starts pumping out sunny doubles with abandon. By the time rebloom is underway, one gets all double, all the time. (Reminds one of good cookies- all butter, all the time, and preferably lemon-flavored!)
Leprechaun's Lace
Hudson, 1983
A super-cute diamond-dusted mini! Little melon blooms on a right-sized, petite plant are perfect for the from of the border or a walkway. And here in our garden, it reblooms into the fall. Pod and pollen fertile.
Let Loose
Stamile, 2003
A great big unusual form tet who dreams about pushing through to spider territory one day. Good rebloom!
Lexington Avenue
Munson-R.W., 1990
A wonderful, watermarked Munson cultivar.
Life Goes On
Douglas-H., 2016
An enormous watermarked orchid creation by Heidi Douglas, with a different face for every day. Flat blooms occasionally crispate/quill and are always presented perfectly. Looks incredible in our garden between neighbors Bob Markey and A Verdant Desire!
Lillian's Alabama Sunrise
Manning, 2007
This cultivar is simply gorgeous among the reblooming eye/edge crowd! In other gardens it can appear primarily pink, but usually wears glowing peach tones here in our neck of the woods. Multiple blooms often open simultaneously for a grand show.
Lilting Belle
Wilson, 1983
A graceful daylily for the midseason. Many blooms open at once! A pale eyezone that adds to the visual appeal. Good increase, and priced accordingly.
Lilting Lavender
Childs-F., 1973
Some days, you see the hint of an eye, and some days you don't on this reblooming, fertile diploid that is as "old" as one of us here at the farm. (No hints!) However, Lilting Lavender seems to be aging with more grace.
Little Lemon Twist
Cochenour, 2008
Gorgeous branching presents a profusion of little crispate blooms to perfection. Dormant, hardy and fertile.
Little Tutu
Williams-S., 2017
Micro doubles are hard to come by. This little dormant has wonderful branching!
Lizard's Purple Fashion
Baucom, 2003
We have hunted far and wide in search of interesting daylilies, and thus have a few hard-to-find cultivars in our stash. That includes this awarded color-changer.
Lone Star Hot Lips
Payne-L.H., 2011
A perfect mini that starts early and (on our farm) reblooms all season long on increasingly tall and branched scapes. Dormant. We can vouch for pod fertility.
Long Legged Lap Dancer
Hanson-C., 2004
Rock-hardy, well-branched, tall and bold. We don't usually see sculpting in the eye area this far south, but that's how we like it.
Longfields Butterfly
Heemskerk, 2011
A cute little rounded bi-tone that is taller in our garden, especially for the rebloom scapes.
Longshot
Aucoin, 2005
A striking cultivar! Longshot is a hardy evergreen that we purchased from Missouri. Among the first tets to bloom in the spring.
Lounge Lizard
Hanson-C., 1999
Gotta love Curt Hanson's naming! Despite being saddled with a heavy one, this well-branched, hardy tet is favored for typically reblooming here late in the season when many others are finished.
Love in a Vacuum
Hanson-C., 2010
An almost-perfect daylily became perfect when we saw it put on a full rebloom show in our garden! It's one of those northern-bred beauties who apparently hide that trait until they come further south. We were really happy when Michael Bouman parted with a DF for us a few years ago. Can't get enough of those ruffled raspberry/rose blooms with substantial presence. Fertile both ways. Display.
Lullaby Baby
Spalding-W., 1975
Lullaby baby is an awarded cultivar with small diamond-dusted blooms that are presented on well-branched scapes consistently taller than registered height. Plant habit is not to be undestimated; when we first saw the prolific, blue-green fans of foliage, the word "architectural" came to mind. Fertile both ways and forms cute little rounded, pumpkin-like pods.
Luscious Kiss
Nordstrom, 2018
This is one petite hottie! Luscious Kiss is a reblooming machine with dramatic bitone action. On some days, the darker eye covers most of the petals and the ruffled edge gorgeously matches the sepals. On other days, paler blooms pop in the vigorous, upright blue-green foliage. Good increase and extremely pod fertile. A hard-to-find cultivar.
Madagascal Moon
Church, 2009
Don Church crafted a substantial rebloomer and gave it a fun name. Partial to Madagascar and clear, reblooming yellows, we bought it. The piecrust edge and clear lemon are a delicious combo! This is a northern-hardy dormant.
Made from Scratch
Tanner-G., 2009
A big and tall EMO with heavy substance and rebloom. Vigorous green foliage is magnificent even before the blooms show up.
Magic Dancer
Heemskerk, 2007
This one shows good branching and northern hardiness. Proliferates.
Mahdi
Moldovan, 2005
A rebloomer with impressive height, budcount and branching who looks fab in other gardens but has underwhelmed us in ours, and is thus priced to make space.
Mal
This near-white tetraploid by Stamile has 7.25" blooms that look good with everything!
Mapping New Mexico
Shooter-F., 2014
Faye Shooter created this distinctive and complex spatulate dip and she's a beaut! While we painted over the southwestern colors on our house (preferring white), they look great on this daylily!
Martina Verhaert
Morss, 1998
A dramatic eye/edge cultivar with good budcount on a strong plant. Will knock your socks off in a clump! Reblooms.
Mauna Loa
Roberts, 1976
Mauna Loa is a screaming orange with a stippled darker overlay that adds extra interest. Wide branching and always reblooms here. Fertile both ways.
Maybe "Linda"
This unidentified cultivar has been growing next to our house for many years. It's a special plant that connects us to history and mystery! It may be "Linda", a dip registered by Stout in 1936. You decide!
Mayor of Munchkinland
Herrington-T., 2010
MOM is all it's cracked up to be, and growing it is sheer delight! These days, winning the Stout makes a real statement- and many other awards besides! Blooms are distinctive and charming, with a red eye and a matching extra brush of red towards the tips of the petals (apparent on non-recurving days). In plant habit, we have been astonished with the candelabra branching, high budcount, and massive rebloom display (3 rounds of scapes). Sets a pod every time! Display.
Mean as a Snake
Shooter-E., 2004
A darker child of the arresting Indian Giver, MAAS also displays wider branching and more robust foliage. Striking!
Memphis
Trimmer, 2008
Memphis wowed us from the moment we saw it! Stunning ruffled substance, great fertility, late rebloom.
Mephistopheles
Moldovan, 1990
This dark, velvety tet is a masterpiece! Flattish blooms with bright green throats are held with poise above the foliage. A favorite for intense color.