Surprise Lilies

Surprise lilies are North America’s cousin to tropical Amaryllis. (Photo by Charlotte Ekker Wiggins)

Surprise lilies are North America’s cousin to tropical Amaryllis. (Photo by Charlotte Ekker Wiggins)

Surprise Lilies

One of the reasons I know August is around the corner is because “naked ladies” are popping up around town, and in my hillside garden. A cousin of South American Amaryllis, the pink flowers on top of two to three-foot stems are also known as surprise lilies, Resurrection lilies and August lilies because the stems seem to pop up out of nowhere.

Surprise lilies have been cultivated for centuries in their native Japan. They were first introduced to American gardeners around 1880.

There are a number of different colors and shapes; the most well known variety here is the pink surprise lily, Lycoris squamigera.

Surprise lilies store energy in bulbs that can grow to 3 inches wide. One-inch wide green leaves emerge in late winter or early spring and then turn yellow and die away. The plants go dormant until flowers emerge in mid-summer, which allows them to survive prolonged periods of summer drought.

Overnight, they seem to pop out of the ground with little fanfare, often growing several inches from one day to the next!

Surprise lilies are quite hardy and easy to grow. They grow well in full sun, part shade, and even heavy shade. By planting them in different sunlight conditions, I can extend the surprise lily season in my garden from mid-summer through the green dearth of August, when little starts blooming. They also thrive in both sandy and heavy clay soils.

These surprise lilies are growing in shade in my apiary. (Photo by Charlotte Ekker Wiggins)

These surprise lilies are growing in shade in my apiary. (Photo by Charlotte Ekker Wiggins)

Because bulbs multiply, it’s best to dig them up and divide them every 5 years or so. I think about dividing them but I am not that disciplined. I do have several patches around my hillside garden only because I inadvertently dug them up when planting something else in a spot I thought was vacant.

They look best planted in clusters.

Depending on your soil, bulbs can be planted from 3-6 inches deep - the deeper the better so they can be assured winter protection. Like daffodils, surprise lilies are toxic to deer, mice and other bulb-eating garden residents, including insects.

To transplant, dig up bulbs in spring after leaves have turned yellow.

They can also be dug up after blooms fade in August, assuming soil is not as hard as concrete from lack of rain. Plant them quickly after digging them up so roots have enough time to establish themselves before the first hard frost.

I love seeing them clearly when they bloom but you can also plant them in the middle of a garden bed so the naked stems will be covered by surrounding plants. If you enjoy pink tulips in spring, like in these pink tulips quilts, you will enjoy having the pink pop of color mid-summer.

Blooms are long lasting and fragrant, making them good cut flowers. I like to put them in a clear flower vase so I can enjoy how the stems curl up at the bottom. They are also pollinator favorites, especially bumblebees and humningbird moths.

Charlotte

Naked Ladies

Surprise lilies, also called naked ladies, make lovely cut flowers.

Surprise lilies, also called naked ladies, make lovely cut flowers.

Naked Ladies

When I started doing a live Rolla radio interview a few years back, I would take fresh flowers in from my garden.

Both radio personalities Lee Buhr and Bob McKune seemed to enjoy the flowers, and it was a fun way to relate to radio listeners. For the following days after the interview, people would approach me with their stories about a particular flower or on-air discussion.

One year, I had to step away for a few minutes before the interview so I snuck the flowers into the studio.

It was a vase of surprise lilies, also called resurrection lilies or magic lilies.

Surprise lilies get their nickname from their habit of blooming on naked stalks.

Surprise lilies get their nickname from their habit of blooming on naked stalks.

A cousin to the popular Amaryllis bulbs available around Christmas, surprise lilies leaf out in spring, then die back until mid-July, when one green stalk makes its way out of the ground and soft pink blooms appear on the top for several days.

One surprise lily can fill a room with its sweet fragrance.

As cut flowers, surprise lily stalks have an interesting habit of curling up at the bottom, giving them a very modern look in a clear glass vase.

Perennial bulbs originally from the East - either Japan or China, surprise lilies are found on old farmsteads in Missouri, almost as popular as daffodils and day lilies.

When I got back to the radio station, I was told the phones were ringing off the hook.

Thinking it was due to some discussion Lee and Bob were having, I thought nothing of it when Bob motioned me to enter the studio.

We had a nice discussion about surprise lilies and what else was growing in my garden, a few words about an upcoming event and I was through.

As I was getting back to my office, someone asked if I had heard what Bob had said as my introduction to the interview.

"Bob said coming up next, naked ladies in the studio."

That's another name for surprise lilies, but to this day there are some people who bring it up as if they need confirmation impish Bob wasn't talking about me!

Charlotte