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2006-08-26 07:18:22 · 8 answers · asked by dazee052 3 in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

8 answers

First dig up the whole plant.
Then use a garden fork, spade or shovel to separate large clumps that are too difficult to separate by hand.
Separate the plant into rooted segments, each with about 3 shoots.
The planting hole should be 1 ft deep & 12-18 in in diameter
Make sure the daylily is on a mound in the center of the hole, & the crown is 1 in. below the soil surface. Then fill in the dirt. Pat down firmly to remove air pockets.
Dividing daylilies is usually done on the average of every 4-6 yrs. or whenever they get overcrowded. They like well-drained, fertile soil.
Water deeply only once a week to encourage the plant to send out new roots.
"When planted in the fall, bare-root daylilies should be planted 4-6 weeks prior to soil freezing to permit re-establishment of roots. Fall-planted daylilies, like all perennials, should be mulched the first winter to prevent the plants heaving from the soil through successive freeze/thaw cycles." (*)
P.S. Some sites say to separate & replant in the spring or fall, but I've successfully divided daylilies in the summer in the N.E.

2006-08-26 07:24:00 · answer #1 · answered by ANGEL 7 · 1 0

Daylily plants can be seperated into "fans". Dig up your clumps of daylilies and you'll see where each "fan" comes up from a clump of tubers. VERY gently divide the "fans" and the tubers that are connected to the fans. Each Daylily fan is a new plant...but a small plant and may take a year or more to produce flowers. It depends on the variety of the daylily and the size of the fans upon division.

2006-08-26 07:47:55 · answer #2 · answered by redneckgardendiva 4 · 0 0

Dig them up and divide the roots with a shovel or spade. You can usually get 3-4 smaller plants off a big one. And it's best to do it in the fall. You can do it now as long as they are done blooming.

2006-08-26 08:09:29 · answer #3 · answered by sheeny 6 · 0 0

With a shovel, just like when you break ground for the new transplant spot. Works for irises, too. Grandma said.

2006-08-26 07:21:27 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

You can use a spade or shovel but I usually break them apart by hand. Once the soil is knocked off, they usually pull apart pretty easily.

2006-08-26 12:43:57 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

a million. prepare a clean Daylily mattress. making waiting the soil for a clean daylily mattress earlier digging the previous clump shall we you get the divisions into the floor promptly, earlier their roots develop into dried and broken from exposure to the outdoor. do away with any weeds from the chosen spot and artwork the soil to a intensity of a foot or so, incorporating countless inches of peat moss to make the soil greater pliable and moisture-retentive. 2. Dig the clump decrease decrease back the Daylily's long outer leaves to approximately 6 inches to make it much less perplexing to handle. attempt to no longer injury the hot inner leaves transforming into interior the middle of each and every fan. With a pitch fork loosen the soil all over the clump. artwork around the fringe countless situations to loose as lots of the roots from the soil as available. because of the fact daylilies strengthen extensive root structures, that's mandatory to dig down 10-12 inches. next, use the fork to pry the completed clump out of the floor. Shake or wash extra soil off the roots so which you are going to see the guy followers. 3. Make Divisions as quickly as out of the floor, a brilliant, sturdy clump of daylilies can look notably daunting. initiate by putting apart it into 2 sections; use 2 spading forks placed decrease back to diminish back interior the middle of the inspiration mass to pry the halves aside. Then pull each and each area aside or use a pointy knife to diminish the clump into smaller and smaller chunks. 4. Plant the Divisions Dig the planting holes 18 inches to 2 ft aside and wider than the inspiration hundreds. Then make a small mound of soil interior the middle of each and every hollow, set the crown of the branch on it, and unfold the roots frivolously around it. If some roots are too long, trim them decrease back to eight inches or so fairly than cramming them into the hollow. organization the soil over the roots, overlaying the crown without greater beneficial than an inch of soil. A plant buried decrease than too plenty soil could rot. Water the vegetation nicely and tuck a easy mulch in around their bases (yet no longer over the crowns) to help the soil preserve moisture. for the time of warm spells, shade the hot vegetation with shingle or shade fabric supported on stakes. while freezing climate methods, hide them with a mulch of straw or evergreen boughs. The overlaying protects the greater youthful vegetation from being heaved out of the floor by substitute freezing and thawing of the soil.

2016-12-11 15:47:13 · answer #6 · answered by hirschfeld 4 · 0 0

dig them up by the clump, using your hands break the soil off and just break them into several bunches of tubers or use hand pruners if you like. plant them back promptly, water in well.

2006-08-26 07:27:17 · answer #7 · answered by jlucas225 2 · 0 0

id dig up the whole clump and gently seperate them by hand.

2006-08-26 07:23:25 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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