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If
all has gone well, in late spring seed leaves will begin to appear.
As lilies are monocots, these leaves look like fine blades of grass.
Under the mulch, a small bulblet has formed between the seed leaf
and a fine root. We usually leave everything as it is in the flat
for the first full year to allow the bulblet to develop.
The
following spring, the seedlings once again show only single leaves,
but now slightly broader; we can then begin to remove the young
plants gently from the flat (a painstaking job, but helped if the
soil in the flat is relatively sandy), and plant them four or five
to a 6" pot at the same depth they were at in the flat. We
then put well rotted "horse chips" on the surface of the
soil for mulch.
For
at least another year, maybe two, the seedlings will show only one
leaf, but they will become progressively larger and more spatulate
(shaped like a spatula) in shape. Underground, a bulb will be formed
of several bulblets adhering to each other.
Finally,
about four years after germination, the first stem with a whorl
of leaves will appear. In late summer, when the new bulbs have been
formed, we transplant the "juveniles" into their own individual
pots. Since they "wander" to the edges of the pots, they
usually need to be repotted one or more times before they finally
bloom around their seventh year. We watch the bottoms of the pots
for signs that the plants are getting "impatient" - if
not caught in time, they can easily send a stolon out of a drainage
hole and try to form a new bulblet on the outside. The plant is
now certainly ready for "planting out!"
The
seedling leaves of the Canada Lily die back in late summer. Juvenile
leaves often disappear early in the growing season due to predation,
but this does not mean that the seedlings in question are lost.
More often than not, they send up a new leaf the following year,
set back somewhat in their development perhaps, but otherwise healthy.
Frequently,
in a Canada lily's first year of bloom, only one flower is produced.
Healthy, mature plants, however, usually produce many more. This
year, some of our Canada Lilies had from 8 to 12 flowers, a glorious
sight.
See
also Native Lilies, Part Two: Planting
Glossary
Monocot
(Monocotyledon): A flowering plant that has only one seed leaf in
the seed.
Whorl:
Three or more leaves arranged in a circle around the stem.
Stolon:
A horizontal branch from the base of a plant, running at or just
below the ground surface, that produces new plants.
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