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Book Description: Few perennials are as tough and versatile as daylilies (genus Hemerocallis), and even fewer offer daylilies' enormous range of color, shape, and growing characteristics. Any backyard gardener can hybridize daylilies, but this blessing of easy breeding can also be something of a curse to the newcomer. John Peat and Ted Petit have come to the rescue in this authoritative overview of all aspects of daylily history, cultivation, and breeding. Inspired by R. W. Munson Jr.'s classic treatment, Hemerocallis, they fully describe the history of the modern daylily. The heart of the book details the various types of hybrids and provides indispensable advice for growing all of them well.
ylily:A Guide for Gardeners: This book was a self-serving book for the hybridizers, Peat and Petit..Most of the images were THEIR daylilies...Their Color Encyclopedia of Daylilies was much better...
Waste of colour fotography!: After the first edition of The Encyclopedia of Daylilies, I was expecting the same high quality. No way! The printing is abomanable, poor editing and generally a slap-dash production. Shame, as the info is certainly valuable and the various authors that have contributed deserved a better production job! What happened, TP?
Advancing the Daylily story a few more years: Another offering from Messrs Peat and Petit, authors of The Color Encyclopedia of Daylilies, published 2000, (and with The New The Color Encyclopedia of Daylilies due to be published 2008), if nothing else brings the story of daylilies on a few more years. The Daylily does cover much of the same ground as their Encyclopedia in that it discuses the original species and its development in the hand of hybridisers. However much more space is given to the growing of daylilies with chapters on Landscaping with daylilies, Cultivation, Pest and Diseases, Hybridising and Exhibiting Daylilies in Shows. There is also chapter a devoted to Award Winning Daylilies; a Chapter each for Daylilies in Australia, Canada and Europe; and a chapter devoted to Daylily Societies and Events. Also included is a list of Sources for Daylilies and a Bibliography. Many of the chapters are not the work of Peat and Petit but contributed by other writers, so even where there might be a duplication of topic at least in the hands of a different contributor we get a new slant. The biggest single section of the book, 50pp, is given over to A Selection of Daylilies for the Garden. Each cultivar is described in terms of size, colour, flowering season along with other facts, and many of them are pictured in colour; almost all of the cultivars included here are post 1990. A further selection is included, and pictured, in the chapter A Look to the Future. It all makes for a very useful contribution to the Daylily library. However it Peat and Petit's apparent preference for rounded and heavily ruffled flowers does mean sadly that there are very few Spiders and UFs included. With the authors extensive knowledge of their subject it would have been interesting to have included some personal comment or evaluation of the cultivars listed. The more than 200 colour illustrations might sound a lot, but as the authors point out each year over 1,600 new plants are registered, so in Daylily terms this merely scratches the surface; and for those of us outside the USA many of these never become realistically available. So perhaps the real value of this book is that it provides an insight into the direction Daylily hybridising is going, and what we can expect to see in the future.
| Author: | John P. Peat | | Author: | Ted L. Petit | | Binding: | Hardcover | | Dewey Decimal Number: | 635.934324 | | EAN: | 9780881926668 | | Format: | Illustrated | | ISBN: | 0881926663 | | Number Of Pages: | 200 | | Publication Date: | 2004-10-01 | | UPC: | 008819266631 |
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