Gardeners make day trips to purchase and admire rare day lilies

AMESVILLE — Wandering into the Hardys’ day lily garden on Sugar Hill Road is a bit like being in “The Wizard of Oz†at the moment the film switches from black and white to color.

According to Gerald Hardy, there are a mere 50,000 plants (representing 1,000 varieties) on hand.

Hardy and his wife, Marilyn Davis Hardy, are both artists. The day lily business is “a sideline,†he said. And a pretty successful one, with a 30-year history that spreads out over three fields.

It’s hard for the non-horticultural newcomer to get a grip on the riot of color at the Hardys’ place. Tom Chauvin of Canton, a customer for years, said he likes to tell the story of   two ladies making their first trip. “One of them said ‘I think we’re in heaven.’â€

Hardy said many of the plants are the result of experimentation. “We hybridize, and come up with new shapes and unusual colors.â€

Like the salmon-colored Big Kiss, which attracted the attention of Betsy Selfo of Harwinton, who just repainted her house and is changing the flowers to coordinate.

She was on a day trip with her friend (and master gardener) Deb Weinberg of Glastonbury. The pair enjoy making plant-related day trips around southern New England; they visited Rhode Island and the Boston area in recent weeks. It was their rookie trip to the Hardys’.  

“We might as well go on day trips,†said Weinberg. “Can’t afford to go anywhere.â€

Business has been good, Hardy said. “We’re selling something you can’t get anywhere else.â€

The flowers cost between $15 and $25 for a clump — meaning six fans. (And if that doesn’t help, you’ll just have to go see for yourself.)

“They sell themselves,†Hardy said. “You get a lot of bloom for years.â€

But time is running out in the short six-week blooming (and selling) season. The Hardys will wind up their summer operations the first weekend in August.

The garden is open Thursday through Sunday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., through Aug. 8. For more information visit hardydaylilygarden.com or call 860-824-0381.

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