Home > Catalogue > Hemerocallis 'RUBY STELLA'
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Illustrative photo.
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Hemerocallis 'RUBY STELLA' daylily

size/type
low perennial,mid-sized perennial
usual height
0,3-0,4m
usual width
0,3-0,5m
leaves
deciduous broadleaf
colour of leaves
green
flowers
showy
colour of flowers
maroon
blooming time
July-September
location
full to partial sun
soil type
any (acidic to alkaline)
USDA zone (lowest)
3   (down to -40°C)
winter protection
 
for zone 5+6
Kód zimní ochrany zóna 5+6
for zone 7
Kód zimní ochrany zóna 7
mycorrhizal product
categorized

Hemerocallis

The genus Hemerocallis comprises roughly fifteen species of perennial herbs in the family Asphodelaceae, native to eastern Asia, where they grow along woodland margins, in grassy valleys and on moist slopes. They are characterised by grass‑like, two‑ranked leaves arising from short rhizomes and by flowering scapes bearing tubular to funnel‑shaped blooms that open for only a single day. This rhythm gave the genus its name: the Greek hemera means day and kallos beauty. The first formal description was published by Carl Linnaeus (1707–1778), yet several species had been cultivated in China for millennia as medicinal plants and vegetables. Daylilies reached Europe in the sixteenth century, but true breeding progress began only in the twentieth century in the United States, where thousands of cultivars were created with an astonishing range of colours, shapes, sizes and flower types. Modern collections include miniature forms, giant blooms, spider types, doubles and extremely free‑flowering lines that have placed daylilies among the most widely grown perennials in the world.

Daylilies have accompanied people for centuries and have acquired strikingly different meanings across cultures. In China they were valued as medicinal plants and their flower buds – the “golden needles” – are still used in cooking as a delicate vegetable. In Korea they symbolised motherhood and feminine devotion, while in Japan they appear in poetry as an image of transience, opening in the morning and fading by evening. In European gardens they became popular for their reliability, longevity and ability to flower throughout summer with minimal care. And although each bloom lasts only a single day, the plant produces so many that a border appears as a continuously renewed wave of colour. Modern breeding has brought a spectacular array of colours and flower forms, from cream, lemon yellow, apricot, pink, red and wine shades to almost black tones, together with bold edges, bands, veining and ruffled margins that have made daylilies one of the most variable perennials of today. With a touch of humour, yet entirely deservedly, they are also counted among the plants described as “foolproof”, because they survive almost anything even the most inexperienced gardener might do to them. 

Description of the plant

Ruby Stella is one of the very few daylilies that reliably bloom almost all summer long. Its flowers are 8-9 cm across, broadly funnel-shaped, ruby red with a bright yellow throat, open wide, and appear in profusion from about mid-July until September atop thin, 30-40 cm tall, slightly arching stems until early autumn. The leaves are narrower compared to other hybrids, medium green, deciduous, and form a dense clump.

It was found by Leo Berbee in his Dutch nursery in Lisse, the Netherlands, in 1992. Even though he has nothing in common with the previous re-blooming Stella daylily – Stella de Oro that was bred by Walter Jablonski and introduced in 1975, he decided to keep the word in his discovery making it clear that Ruby Stella could well be a very close relative with its prolonged flowering period and narrow leaves. He applied for a patent in 2004 but that was abandoned a year after and never granted.

Growing conditions and care

Daylilies thrive in full sun or light partial shade and grow best in deeper, fertile, well‑drained yet consistently slightly moist soils. Thanks to their fleshy roots (rhizomes) they tolerate even prolonged dry periods without damage. They flower most abundantly in sunny positions and when clumps are divided every four to six years, which maintains vigour and prevents congestion in the centre. After flowering, the foliage of some cultivars may look tired, so it is advisable to remove the entire spent scapes and, when needed, the oldest or damaged leaves to maintain a clean appearance and encourage further blooming. Young shoots can be attractive to small shelled slugs, which slightly damage them visually, particularly in moist spring weather. The roots are very hardy in the ground and overwinter reliably even in severe winters; most cultivars tolerate temperatures down to around –40 °C (USDA zone 3). In containers they perform well only in sufficiently large pots with quality substrate, regular watering, feeding and protection from summer overheating, otherwise they dry out quickly and reduce flowering. They are long‑lived, reliable, undemanding and generally free from serious pests and diseases.

Last update 15-11-2021

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