Click for previous Image Image 1 of 4 Hemerocallis Daylily

Hemerocallis 'The Last Melon'

Daylily

Plant Type:

SUN PERENNIALS

Hemerocallis 'The Last Melon' - We have special affection for this beautiful late season pastel cantaloupe melon; it's one that we always look forward to and one with which we would not be without. Single fans often produce multiple scapes and many of them. 'The Last Melon' offers an enormous bud count, it increases quickly and flowers for a long time. The color is soft, warm and gentle. 


5.5”/ L / H32”/ / / D / dor


From Jan H. (CT) on 9.10.2015: Hello Wayne - The Agapanthus and Hemerocallis arrived early Wednesday afternoon ... What gorgeous looking plants ... so healthy and so big! They traveled very well. A bargain I'd say. Now if they do as well as the lovely woodland Peony I bought from you a few years ago I will be very happy. Thank you so much for your loving care of the earth! Jan


 


Item Description Price  
HEMLAST Hemerocallis 'The Last Melon' (bare root) $14.00


Characteristics and Attributes for Hemerocallis 'The Last Melon'

Season of Interest (Flowering)

  • Late Summer / Autumn

Nature Attraction

  • Butterflies
  • Honey Bees & Native Bees

Light

  • Full Sun
  • Mostly Sunny

Attributes

  • Border
  • Massing
  • Specimen

Soil

  • Adaptable

Propagated By

  • Bare Root
  • Division

Genus Overview: Hemerocallis

Common Name: Daylily

The well-known daylily. We have become increasingly taken with the late and very late bloomers. Those glorious daylily trumpets add such rich and contrasting texture to mops and strands of goldenrods, Joe-pye weeds and late season daisy flowers that occur in abundance at this time; they are splendid with the broad flattened domes of ironweeds, the spikes of Persicaria amplexicaulis ‘Firetail’ plus the seeds and berries that so opulently populate the landscape in the late season. We are offering a handful of mid-season bloomers. Of course, most of the breeding has centered about these and for this reason many of these cultivars are fancier. But we find there is elegance in the simpler flower form and gentler colors, often soft pastels, in the later selections. Most of the late bloomers but not all have originated with Olallie Daylily Gardens in South Newfane, VT. All cultivars are hardy in USDA zones 3 to 9 unless otherwise marked. All of the following are sent as bareroot divisions of our plants.

Please refer to the following descriptive codes for all daylilies:

Flower Size: is measured in inches (“)

Bloom Season: Very Early = VE

Early = E

Early Middle = EM

Middle = M,

Middle Late = ML

Late = L

Very Late = VL

Height: with an upper case “H” is measured in inches (“)

Rebloom: is indicated with an upper case “R”

Fragrance: is indicated with an upper case “F”

Very Fragrant: is indicated with an upper case “VF”

Diploid: is indicated with an upper case “D”

Tetraploid: is indicated with an upper case “T”

Dormant: is indicated with a lower case “dor”

Evergreen: is indicated with a lower case “ev”

All Daylilies are sold bare root