mariposa lily

Here’s a plant I hadn’t grown before, the Mari­posa Lily, Calo­chor­tus super­bus.

Mariposa Lily

The first plant to bloom was creamy yel­low, almost white, with very few mark­ings. It had a remark­ably lacy petal thing going on–but that was due to insects munch­ing on the plant.

And then this clone bloomed, pale blush with some of the most out­ra­geous petal mark­ings I’ve ever seen on a bulb, almost like a pea­cock feather. Gee, I thought I’d got­ten the wrong bulbs since they were so dif­fer­ent. But doing my research I was assured they were actu­ally the kinds of vari­a­tion you can expect from this plant. In fact, there’s a web page that shows lots of vari­a­tions of this species.

Interior of Mariposa lily

I haven’t seen what this plant does dur­ing the sum­mer in a bed that gets moderate-to-light water­ing. This is a Cal­i­for­nia native and comes from areas where it dries out in the sum­mer, so chances are excel­lent that the bulbs would rot in the ground. I’ll try to dig up most of them and store them dry, but I’ll leave a few in the ground for a test, par­tic­u­larly those in areas that are far­ther away from the sprin­kler. They’re so cool–I hope they’ll come back next year!

May 17 2008 11:43 am | Categories: my gardenplant profiles | Tags:

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