Last year, these lilies appeared at the very edge of a well-established perennial bed in my “garden oasis”. The mystery – I never planted them. I’m not sure what they’re called or how they got there!
Do they have an aroma? If so they may be an oriental lily, possibly a “boogie woogie” variety. A friend of mine has been raising lilies for years and he has 500 lilies blooming in his yard each summer…and that variety is one of favorites.
There is a light scent – hurrah! Perhaps I have a boogie woogie lily! Now can you solve the mystery of how it got into my garden. Last year was the first appearance…..
I think they can stay dormant for a couple years in colder areas but perhaps an animal dug up and replanted, OR someone didn’t want to pitch out and planted in your garden as a mystery surprise. 🙂
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Well however it happened it was a most welcome surprise and the blossoms have lasted for several weeks! The joy of gardening knows no bounds!
Nice surprise! Bulbs can sometimes remain dormant for years. I planted some Naked Ladies ( a type of amaryllis common along roadsides in Northern California) when we moved into our last house. They never came up. Seven years later, as I was having my morning coffee on the deck, I noticed something pink blooming in the far corner of the yard. My Naked Ladies! This is the only time they ever bloomed!
That is amazing. My mom had dozens of bulbs shipped back from Amsterdam years ago, I did the same a few years later. They came up for a time and then……nothing! But I caught a pesky chipmunk more than once running with half a bulb in his mouth as he headed to the neighbors yard……maybe they’ll come back?
The chipmunks or the bulbs? I too have critters nibbling away at bulbs and roots. But I think that bulbs stop coming up after a while. Many of mine have dwindled in numbers.
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Hopefully just the flowers! The feral cats who inhabit our garden seem to have scared off the chipmunks……
Do they have an aroma? If so they may be an oriental lily, possibly a “boogie woogie” variety. A friend of mine has been raising lilies for years and he has 500 lilies blooming in his yard each summer…and that variety is one of favorites.
There is a light scent – hurrah! Perhaps I have a boogie woogie lily! Now can you solve the mystery of how it got into my garden. Last year was the first appearance…..
Easter Lily! aka Lilium longiflorum! Pretty flower. 🙂
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lilium_longiflorum
Thank you! Is there any chance that these could just show up? Am wondering if a squirrel or chipmunk buried a bulb from a neighbors garden?
I think they can stay dormant for a couple years in colder areas but perhaps an animal dug up and replanted, OR someone didn’t want to pitch out and planted in your garden as a mystery surprise. 🙂
Well however it happened it was a most welcome surprise and the blossoms have lasted for several weeks! The joy of gardening knows no bounds!
Nice surprise! Bulbs can sometimes remain dormant for years. I planted some Naked Ladies ( a type of amaryllis common along roadsides in Northern California) when we moved into our last house. They never came up. Seven years later, as I was having my morning coffee on the deck, I noticed something pink blooming in the far corner of the yard. My Naked Ladies! This is the only time they ever bloomed!
That is amazing. My mom had dozens of bulbs shipped back from Amsterdam years ago, I did the same a few years later. They came up for a time and then……nothing! But I caught a pesky chipmunk more than once running with half a bulb in his mouth as he headed to the neighbors yard……maybe they’ll come back?
The chipmunks or the bulbs? I too have critters nibbling away at bulbs and roots. But I think that bulbs stop coming up after a while. Many of mine have dwindled in numbers.
Hopefully just the flowers! The feral cats who inhabit our garden seem to have scared off the chipmunks……