Tag Archives: autumn blooms

Nerine Lily Through Four Seasons

Nerine Lilies have got to be on the list of easiest bulbs to grow. A good friend up the street (DP) has designated a cutting bed just for Nerines.

Nerine Lilies aren’t lilies at all. They come from the Amaryllis family via South Africa, which has weather fairly similar to ours here in Victoria.
Seriously.
Remember, we’re on mild Southern Vancouver Island in BC, Canada– zone 7-9.

Last January, a snowstorm brought temperatures to a threatening -15 C (5 F). DP’s Nerine Bowdenii are sheltered close to her house foundations in a west-facing bed– protection from the worst of the cold.
Clever.

This year, the leaf of her Nerines emerged in early February, a delight, along with some early daffodils. It’s exciting to see any new growth during our cloudy winters.

Nerine Lily, Cornish Lily, Cape Flower, Guernsey lily Bowden lily, spider lily, Nerine bowdenii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

The strappy leaves grew & that seemed to be it.
Even by mid-August, it was just a bed of leaves.
Underwhelming.

Nerine Lily, Cornish Lily, Cape Flower, Guernsey lily Bowden lily, spider lily, Nerine bowdenii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

The leaves started looking tired in early September, BUT budding stems were shooting out of the ground. With so much summer colour already fading, the promise of new flowers gives hope.

Nerine Lily, Cornish Lily, Cape Flower, Guernsey lily Bowden lily, spider lily, Nerine bowdenii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Within two weeks, the perky pink flowers were opening. 🙂
Their leaves were fading fast, but the patch of flowers continued through all of October. Even through the rain. (Although these flowers are so close to the foundation that the overhanging roof might have protected them from some of the wet.)

Nerine Lily, Cornish Lily, Cape Flower, Guernsey lily Bowden lily, spider lily, Nerine bowdenii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

A cutting bed isn’t the showiest way to display blooms, but it serves a purpose. There’s no expectation for it to be a constant showpiece. This one is around the side of the house. DP can plunder the blooms guilt-free. She adds several stems of these firework flowers to each bouquet of her pale pink pompom Dahlias — such a striking, and long-lasting combo.

And the best part? Maintenance is minimal.

  • Nerines are deer-resistant, so there isn’t the constant fuss about protecting them from our roaming neighbourhood herds.
  • Pulling the occasional weed keeps down the competition.
  • A bit of automatic irrigation from May through September is appreciated. Most systems run at an inch per week, but even less will be fine.
  • The leaf dies back in the autumn & by mid-November, the naked stems & seedheads collapse at first frost. The only chore is to cover the bed with a blanket of leaf mulch.
  • When they are really comfortable, Nerine bowdenii multiply like crazy. Still, they perform well even when crowded. After several years, dig & divide, shifting & gifting the excess before mulching your treasures.

Easy peasy.
Right?

Nerine Lily, Cornish Lily, Cape Flower, Guernsey lily Bowden lily, spider lily, Nerine bowdenii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

In truth, I’ve yet to succeed with Nerines in our garden.
BUT I think there are a couple of reasons why:

  • It is very dry in Victoria for months in the summer & I barely water our borders.
  • Most of our beds get soggy during our rainy winters.
  • Happy Nerines in our area are irrigated AND in raised beds… or in sandy soil… or on slopes that drain quickly.
  • Nerines also need a shallow planting with their shoulders exposed to light.

Those are a few ways that I could’ve screwed up. Too little water in summer… too much water in winter… or too deep for planting. 😦
Overall, if your nerines are performing well — you’re in the pink.
Easy peasy. 🙂

Nerine Lily, Cornish Lily, Cape Flower, Guernsey lily Bowden lily, spider lily, Nerine bowdenii, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

-30-

Other Indispensibles:

Apple Blossom Camellia

Camellia japonica apple blossom, Joy Sander, Camellia sasanqua,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Here’s a darling fall & winter flower that caught our Christmas guest’s attention as they came to the door.

Camellia japonica apple blossom, Joy Sander, Camellia sasanqua,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Camellia ‘Apple Blossom’ is just beginning to bloom at Haloween.  It continues through November and December if the weather is right.

I treasure every new bloom.  But the shrub doesn’t garner our guests’ compliments until the winter solstice has passed.

Camellia japonica apple blossom, Joy Sander, Camellia sasanqua,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

When protected from the brunt of the wind, this camellia happily goes about its business.  Even our resident blacktail deer seem to let it be.  🙂

Camellia japonica apple blossom, Joy Sander, Camellia sasanqua,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

My morning coffee is that much more of a treat when I’m also watching the overwintering Anna’s hummingbirds investigating the Camellia blossoms.

When each flower opens, its pink petals fade to white.
Plain.
Hummingbirds typically look for more dramatic blooms.
I reckon it’s the heavy yellow pollen that is drawing them near.

Camellia japonica apple blossom, Joy Sander, Camellia sasanqua,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

In mid-January, the Pacific Northwest suffered a snowstorm.  Now that’s drama!

Camellia japonica apple blossom, Joy Sander, Camellia sasanqua,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

The delicate buds & blooms froze – then turned brown & mushy.
So sad.
If it had stayed sunny with only light rain, the flowers would have lasted.  Alas, that’s just not often our January weather.

Fortunately for me, this camellia is listed as zone 5 – – and we don’t get that kind of cold in Victoria.  Our shrub should survive to bloom another day…
maybe not this winter…
but perhaps next fall.    🙂

-30-

PS.  Here are some more pink fall friends:

Back From the Dead

We were away camping for most of August + early September. The garden had to survive through the dry heat all by itself.

Amaryllis belladonna , Madonna Lily, Jersey Lily, Amaryllis rosea, Brunsvigia rosea,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

Imagine my delight returning to a cloud of pink blooms hovering above the parched bed beside the front gate…

Granted, it’s only one stalk – – but what a cluster of flowers!  AND the deer hadn’t feasted on it as they had the surrounding daylily & crocosmia blooms–Bonus 🙂

To be honest, I’m shocked to see this resurrection.  For the past 10 years, I’ve resigned myself to being a Crinum killer.

Amaryllis belladonna , Madonna Lily, Jersey Lily, Amaryllis rosea, Brunsvigia rosea,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

The original bulb, a giant, came to me via a garden club plant sale.  It was labelled Crinum × powellii (aka Swamp Lily or Cape Lily).
Now I’m thinking it might be Amaryllis belladonna (aka Madonna Lily or Jersey Lily).

I planted it, thrilled at the first year’s blossom, then searched for signs of life the following year…
None…
Nothing the next year either…
After that, I just stopped searching.

Perhaps a hard winter froze the bulb…  (Crinum is zone 7: A.belladonna is zone 4.)
Perhaps too much drought shrivelled the bulb … (Crinum likes moist summers; A.belladonna prefers dry.)
Perhaps it had been crowded out by the crocosmia…  (Both Crinum & A. belladonna, like nerine lilies, prefer their necks exposed to sunshine… last winter I’d removed excess crocosmia)

Amaryllis belladonna , Madonna Lily, Jersey Lily, Amaryllis rosea, Brunsvigia rosea,, garden Victoria, Vancouver Island, BC, Pacific Northwest
photo by SVSeekins

There are so many ways to fail in the garden.  I resigned myself to losing another gem.

Now I’m thinking, it might have simply been a miscommunication in labelling.  Both Crinum & A. belladonna have similar tendencies (pink clusters of bloom… bloom time… toxicity… origins in South Africa… ),
But there are some significant differences, too (A.belladonna leaves die off before it blooms).

Either way, I’m grateful for whichever bulb I have.  It’s one tough cookie.  It patiently waited years until the conditions were just right!!

-30-

Here are some other pink autumn bloomers: