Large flowers bloom many times each summer and fall, typically after a good rain. These very low maintenance rain lilies are stunning when used in a mass planting and are also lovely along a walkway, at the front of a sunny border or on rock gardens.
These species tulips produce bright cardinal red and creamy yellow blooms, bringing a unique color display to spring gardens. These tulips make a lovely display in rock gardens and small group plantings and will naturalize easily.
White and pink bicolor blooms make a lovely display in rock gardens and small group plantings and will naturalize easily. Try planting with herbs and other low growing perennials for a nice contrast of color and texture.
These species tulips produce blooms with lilac-pink petals with a buttery yellow base, offering a splash of bright spring color. These tulips make a lovely display in rock gardens and small group plantings and will naturalize easily.
These tulips produce blooms with deep red outer petals and bright, sunny yellow inner ones, offering a splash of bright spring color. These tulips make a lovely display in rock gardens and small group plantings and will naturalize easily.
Gorgeous yellow and red flowers bloom atop soft green, grasslike leaves. These tulips require less cold than most, making them a wonderful addition to Southern gardens. These tulips make a lovely display in rock gardens and small group plantings and will naturalize easily.
Beautiful, vermilion red blooms appear in late August and September and are followed by lush foliage that persists into spring. Oxblood lilies are low maintenance, grow easily even in heavy clay soils and naturalize readily without becoming invasive. Sometimes called a Hurricane Lily or Schoolhouse Lily.
This reliable rain lily will produce beautiful pink blooms over green, straplike foliage four to six times in one summer. Offers a showy display in your summer garden. Great for naturalizing. Tolerates heat, humidity, sun and shade.
This fragrant campernelle produces lovely, golden, long-lasting blooms with petals twisted like the fans of a pinwheel in late-February. Excellent for naturalizing. Sometimes confused with the sweet smelling jonquils, it has earned the nickname the “giant jonquil.”
Beautiful, lightly scented, red flowers with white stripes bloom mid-April to May and are attractive to bees, hummingbirds and butterflies. Also known as the St. Joseph's Lily, this plant spreads slowly by bulb offsets and is a popular passalong plant.