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#1
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Can one just place a weight on a Hardy Lily rhizome and simply place it in
2-3 feet of water in a man made pond that has a dirt bottom? Will it take root and continue to grow? There is a pond in our neighborhood that could use some foliage and everyone agrees that water lilies would be nice. The pond already contains goldfish. The pound is aprox. 2 acres. Any thoughts on how to plant? Jerry |
#2
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![]() "JJ" wrote in message ... Can one just place a weight on a Hardy Lily rhizome and simply place it in 2-3 feet of water in a man made pond that has a dirt bottom? Will it take root and continue to grow? ====================== That should work. :-) About 2' to 2 1/2' of water would be right. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#3
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Hi Jerry!
I once saw a program on tv where they were planting a natural dirt bottom pond. They took the lily and placed it on a square of burlap. They added some soil and a few fertilizer tabs to the mix and then tied the burlap up around the stems and pads. They rowed out in the pond a bit in a boat and dropped it over the side. I would expect in about three feet of water. Sunlight only goes down to six feet in ponds and lilies usually like under three feet. Though some people have had lilies deeper than that. kathy :-) www.blogfromthebog.com new entry ~ attracting amphibians |
#4
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Depends on what lilly you get..some need shallower water if they are
the miniature...however if you get one that has leaves of say 5 to 7 inches in size they should do fine in water up to about 3 feet or so...The leaves will self adjust for the depth once it gets established. I would just wade out a bit of ways, and using a shovel just make a small depression and push the roots into place firmly, that way its not gonna just up and drift or float off on you. It only takes a minute to plant one in a dirt bottom pond. Most of mine is planted in a dirt bottomed pond, from 12" to well over 3 feet in depth and doing fine. Try and plant it where it will get at least a minimum of 6 hours of full sunlight for best results with blooms and growth, and while your at it shove a few tomatoe plant fertilizer stakes in around the lilly to fertilize it and give it a boost. Usually in a natural tyupe pond they do exceptionally well. On Mon, 18 Apr 2005 18:31:11 -0400, "JJ" wrote: ===Can one just place a weight on a Hardy Lily rhizome and simply place it in ===2-3 feet of water in a man made pond that has a dirt bottom? Will it take ===root and continue to grow? There is a pond in our neighborhood that could ===use some foliage and everyone agrees that water lilies would be nice. The ===pond already contains goldfish. The pound is aprox. 2 acres. ===Any thoughts on how to plant? === ===Jerry === === ============================================== Put some color in your cheeks...garden naked! |
#5
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PS ~ and a rock.
A big rock. They tied up a rock in the bundle to sink it. k ;-) |
#6
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"kathy" wrote:
They tied up a rock in the bundle to sink it. Alternate method: Grow hardy lily in plastic pail in the usual way. Have a few bad years and neglect same until the bucket falls apart. Enjoy nice patch of "Sumptuosa" in earth pond. (Gotta go wading this summer and re-capture/re-domesticate them; other varieties were in sturdier buckets, so reclamation was easier....) Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at home.earthlink.net/~garygarlic Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1420' elevation. NY WO G |
#7
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For years I've watched a hardy white lily, not native to our
state (Washington) spread around the shores of Lake Washington over by the University of Washington. Someone planted it in there and it has taken off and over the years has spread and spread. Really looks pretty but is probably a nuisance to boaters that go from the locks into the lake. kathy :-) |
#8
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Sounds like lots of good advice. My only comment is that if it takes
hold, you will have lots of lillies. Be careful of doing that with lotus...they are harder to get out because of the depth to which they go. Enjoy Jim JJ wrote: Can one just place a weight on a Hardy Lily rhizome and simply place it in 2-3 feet of water in a man made pond that has a dirt bottom? Will it take root and continue to grow? There is a pond in our neighborhood that could use some foliage and everyone agrees that water lilies would be nice. The pond already contains goldfish. The pound is aprox. 2 acres. Any thoughts on how to plant? Jerry |
#9
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JJ wrote:
Can one just place a weight on a Hardy Lily rhizome and simply place it in 2-3 feet of water in a man made pond that has a dirt bottom? Will it take root and continue to grow? There is a pond in our neighborhood that could use some foliage and everyone agrees that water lilies would be nice. The pond already contains goldfish. The pound is aprox. 2 acres. Any thoughts on how to plant? That'll work fine. I've grown lilies bare root, just weighted down, for years. They don't self-root, because I keep the pond bottom clean of dirt, but in a dirt-bottom pond, they'll root and spread. -- derek |
#10
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Thanks Everyone for the advice. I think I'll be planting a few this
weekend. Jerry "Derek Broughton" wrote in message ... JJ wrote: Can one just place a weight on a Hardy Lily rhizome and simply place it in 2-3 feet of water in a man made pond that has a dirt bottom? Will it take root and continue to grow? There is a pond in our neighborhood that could use some foliage and everyone agrees that water lilies would be nice. The pond already contains goldfish. The pound is aprox. 2 acres. Any thoughts on how to plant? That'll work fine. I've grown lilies bare root, just weighted down, for years. They don't self-root, because I keep the pond bottom clean of dirt, but in a dirt-bottom pond, they'll root and spread. -- derek |
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