Date: Fri 02-Apr-1999
Date: Fri 02-Apr-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Quick Words:
GardenKids-Sullivan-lilies
Full Text:
GARDENKIDS : Welcoming Spring With The Stately Easter Lily
By Pat Sullivan
What better flower to proudly announce the long-awaited arrival of Spring than
the stately, trumpet-shaped Easter Lily!
The lily, normally a summer bloomer, has become the traditional flower of
Easter. It is a symbol of purity, innocence, hope and life. In the Christian
religion it represents the resurrection of Jesus Christ and hope of life
everlasting.
The Language of Flowers states that the lily is one of the oldest flowers in
the world. Art, history, mythology, ancient fables, and literature all pay
tribute to this majestic flower. It may be found painted on the walls of
ancient Greek palaces where it was the personal flower of Hera, the moon
goddess. It is said that lilies sprung from the tears of repentance that Eve
shed as she left the Garden of Eden.
The lily is mentioned numerous times in the Bible. Lilies, called the
"white-robed apostles of hope," grew in the Garden of Gethsemane after
Christ's agony. Tradition has it white lilies sprung up where drops of
Christ's sweat fell to the ground in his final hours of sorrow.
Early writers and artists associate the lily with the Virgin Mary's
Annunciation and Resurrection. The pure white petals of the "Madonna Lily," or
Lilium candidum , which means dazzling white, signify her spotless body.
The Easter Lily, Lilium longiflorum , finds its original roots in the southern
islands of Japan. Bermuda was the first to grow it commercially and had a hold
on the market until the early 20th Century when a virus brought production to
a halt.
Japan took over exportation to the US until they attacked Pearl Harbor in
1941, after which their bulb exportation was immediately cut off.
Luckily the US had already started its own Easter Lily production thanks to a
WWI soldier named Louis Houghton, who brought a suitcase of hybrid lily bulbs
to the south coast of Oregon in 1919. Houghton distributed the bulbs to
horticultural friends who grew them as a hobby.
As soon as the Japanese market ceased, the value of the American-grown lily
bulbs skyrocketed and the hobby horticulturists decided to go into business.
Their Easter Lilies became known as "White Gold." Blessed with perfect climate
conditions for cultivating lilies, the Oregon growers produced consistent high
quality bulbs. After the War, the Japanese were never able to regain a
significant market share.
Today over 95 percent of all bulbs grown for the potted Easter Lily market are
produced by just ten farms in a narrow coastal region straddling the
Oregon-California border. The Easter Lily is now the fourth largest crop in
wholesale value in the US potted plant market behind poinsettias, mums and
azaleas.
Welcome this fragrant flower into your home to celebrate either the Christian
holy season or just the fact that it is spring and a time for new beginnings.
Select a plant with blooms at different stages, with a few that are open, a
couple partly open and the rest puffy, but unopened. This, along with cool,
bright conditions, will assure your fleurs of the longest display possible.
Keep the soil moist, but not wet.
If you have youngsters around, this is a perfect flower with which to
demonstrate the parts of a flower -- the sticky pistil and pollen-producing
stamen. Its soft, intoxicating perfume is what entices bees into its cavern to
pollinate the flower and create a new seed.
The Easter Lily is perfectly happy in our Connecticut gardens, so when the
last bloom fades don't toss it! Cut off the flowers, keep it in a sunny
location, water as needed, and fertilize every six weeks. When the danger of
frost is past, which is mid-May in southern Connecticut, plant about six
inches below the soil line in a well-drained garden bed with rich organic
matter. Follow by watering well to eliminate air pockets.
Lilies are content in sun or shade so feel safe to plant in either. Leave the
stems until the foliage, which is producing food for the bulb, dies back.
Easter lilies are "forced" to bloom in greenhouses at Easter. So look for your
lily to bloom naturally next summer.
Keep an eye out for Bambi, as lily buds are one of a deer's favorite
appetizers. Several spray products on the market will convince this
four-legged creature to snack elsewhere.
Give the lily a chance to grace your garden. It may well become one of your
favorites as it has mine.
For more information on the Easter Lily, check out the Internet site
www.easterlilies.com.
(Pat Sullivan is a children's gardening consultant, master gardener and
teaches children's gardening programs at various locations in Connecticut as
well as the New York Botanical Gardens.)
