Even though it’s at the end of a very long pathway, the rich, bright golden blooms of ‘Touched By Midas’ consistently draw our garden visitors over for a look. This one is worth the walk– simply gorgeous!
I needed something to disguise the three-high concrete blocks on which my rain barrels sit, so I thought I’d try these, my first daylilies from Oakes. They grew thick and lush very quickly, and now the goregous blooms realy look striking against the rather utilitarian blue 55 gallon containers. Rather than something really ugly, it almost looks like something planned to be attractive. I’m really happy!
Oh my! The size, shape and color of the blossoms of Touched By Midas are just incredible. This is not some “plain jane” yellow daylily. I’ll admit I’m a bit of a purist with daylilies, very fond of yellow and orange varieties, but even those with more exotic tastes should give this one a try. It’s really spectacular.
I have several golden daylilies and this is one of my favorites due to its beautiful bright color and lovely flower shape. I planted it in Oct 2004. It bloomed from late June to late July 2005. In 2006, it bloomed from late April to early June, and then rebloomed in August. This year it started in late May and is still going strong. Makes a great splash of color. Garden is 55 miles north of San Francisco, Sunset Zone 15.
I just planted this for the first time. It has multiple buds on long stems. I placed it in the back of my shrubs along a lattice so the color will come through. I also have it between some window boxes filled with New Guinea Impatiens and Dianthus which will set the colors ablaze. I can’t wait to see the results!
You can request a specific date in the Order Notes box during checkout, and we will ship your plants as close to the time you request as possible.
We ship February — October.
Or we will send at the proper time for planting:
Winter and Early Spring Orders:
We will send at the appropriate time for Spring planting in your area. See the chart below for approximate starting shipping dates by zone.
Late Spring and Summer Orders :
After shipping has started to your area, we will send as soon as possible, normally within one to two weeks.
PLEASE NOTE – We will do our best to ship as quickly as possible, but the plants are growing in the ground, not sitting on a shelf, so it takes some time to get them dug and ready to ship.
Fall Orders:
We will send as soon as possible, up until it is too late to plant in your area. Orders placed after that time will ship the following spring. See the chart below for last shipping date by zone.
Approximate Dates We Start Shipping by USDA Hardiness Zone:
Zones 9-10: Mid-late February
Zone 8: Early-mid March
Zone 7: Mid-late March
Zone 6: Late March – early April
Zone 5: Early-late April
Zones 2-4: Late April – early May
Approximate Dates We Stop Shipping by USDA Hardiness Zone:
Zones 2-4: Mid-September
Zone 5: Mid-late September
Zone 6: Late September
Zone 7: Early October
Zone 8: Mid October
Zones 9-10: Late October
It’s pretty simple: most of you can grow any of the daylilies we sell. If you live in an area with a sustained cold period like we do in East Tennessee, you can grow all the varieties. However, If you live in an area that doesn’t get freezing weather in the winter, dormant varieties won’t work for you; you need to choose evergreen or semi-evergreen varieties.
We normally include bonus plants equal to about 20% of your order. And these aren’t “leftover” plants, or “whatever we’ve got lying around.” These are the same huge, healthy plants we sell. Just leave the decision up to us— we’ll pick something we know you’ll love!
Daylily Stickers!
After the year we’ve all had, we’re trying to wring whatever joy we can find out of every day— even Tax Day*. So we put our thinking caps on and thought, “What is silly and fun and makes everyone happy?”.
That’s when it hit us: stickers! To make your day brighter, we are offering 13 stickers free with every order today through April 19!!!
Stick ’em on your water bottle, your cooler, your laptop (even your wheelbarrow!) or wherever else you could use a bit of cheery color.
*We know that Tax Day has officially been moved to May 17. Since today is traditionally Tax Day, though, we’re going for it.
dkistner (verified owner) –
I needed something to disguise the three-high concrete blocks on which my rain barrels sit, so I thought I’d try these, my first daylilies from Oakes. They grew thick and lush very quickly, and now the goregous blooms realy look striking against the rather utilitarian blue 55 gallon containers. Rather than something really ugly, it almost looks like something planned to be attractive. I’m really happy!
(0) (0) Watch Unwatch
Melrose, MA –
Oh my! The size, shape and color of the blossoms of Touched By Midas are just incredible. This is not some “plain jane” yellow daylily. I’ll admit I’m a bit of a purist with daylilies, very fond of yellow and orange varieties, but even those with more exotic tastes should give this one a try. It’s really spectacular.
(1) (0) Watch Unwatch
sebastopol, CA –
I have several golden daylilies and this is one of my favorites due to its beautiful bright color and lovely flower shape. I planted it in Oct 2004. It bloomed from late June to late July 2005. In 2006, it bloomed from late April to early June, and then rebloomed in August. This year it started in late May and is still going strong. Makes a great splash of color. Garden is 55 miles north of San Francisco, Sunset Zone 15.
(0) (0) Watch Unwatch
Va. Bch., VA –
I just planted this for the first time. It has multiple buds on long stems. I placed it in the back of my shrubs along a lattice so the color will come through. I also have it between some window boxes filled with New Guinea Impatiens and Dianthus which will set the colors ablaze. I can’t wait to see the results!
(0) (0) Watch Unwatch