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Philippine Lily Seeds

Posted by fishman49 AL 8b (My Page) on
Sat, Oct 24, 09 at 17:35

This year's crop of Philippine Lily seeds is now available. The Philippine Lily looks like an Easter Lily but blooms in late August here on the Gulf Coast. In my yard it grows from 3-6 feet tall with most around 4.5 feet and 5-7 blooms.


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: Philippine Lily Seeds

They're beautiful plant, wonder if they can take zone 8 winter..


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RE: Philippine Lily Seeds

Anyone know how well they would take a frying desert summer?


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RE: Philippine Lily Seeds

I don't think there are any deserts in the Philippines, so . . .

And it's not one that tolerates going "dormant" as the growing season progresses either. Some lilies, if the summer is too hot, they die back early and come back the following spring. Philippinense (and formosanum) are not one of them.


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RE: Philippine Lily Seeds

Thanks, leftwood!
So, they would either be able to tough out the whole summer, or not do well at all. Probably, a lot depends on what elevation they grow at in the Philippines, as an indicator of how much heat their metabolism can take. Do they have any relation to L. longiflorum? That species is one of the most heat tolerant, and it does well here.
Guess that tells me where to research,
Kevin : )


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RE: Philippine Lily Seeds

Kevin,

If it helps, here on the Gulf Coast at 100 feet ASL, in late summer we regularly get highs in the upper 90's with lows in the upper-mid 70's with 90% plus humidity. Since these are seeds and not expensive bulbs, if I wanted to try them where you are, I would plant them in pots for the first year as they look like blades of grass when they sprout. Then after they died back in November, I would transplant them to where they can get the morning sun with full shade during the hottest part of the day.

Don


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RE: Philippine Lily Seeds

Here, we are looking at 115+ degrees in late June, with humidity running in the teens and low twenties. That won't necessarily prevent their growth--we grow many tropicals here in the right microclimates--but around 105 degrees some otherwise "heat tolerant" plants seem to hit a wall (a flaw in the Heat Zone system). Common examples are marigolds, zinnias, Abyssinian banana, Japanese blueberry tree, etc.

My thought was that I could get a few bulbs and know within a year how well they do here, including (hopefully) bloom. I know it is terribly instant gratification of me, but I don't think that I would have the patience to wait 4 years for a bloom that fried in the bud in late May--like my OA hybrids did!

Thanks for the info, though!
Kevin : )


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RE: Philippine Lily Seeds

Some question whether the species actually exists, being so closely related to L. formosanum. There are ongoing debates on how to tell them apart. At any rate, most will agree that those philippinense on the market are likely a genetic mix of the two species.
L.formosanum/philippinense and L. longiflorum are very closely related. Maybe it would be worth a try then.


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RE: Philippine Lily Seeds

Kevin,

You don't have to wait 4 years for bloom with either of the two August blooming species. Some of the Philippine Lily seedlings will bloom the second year and almost all of the remainder the third year.

Don


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