Genus: Liriope

Members growing plants in this genus

  • AndrewR

    Andrewr

    joined 7 Aug, 2007

    316 plants

  • spritzhenry

    Spritzhenry

    joined 17 Jun, 2007

    367 plants

  • Tanja

    Tanja

    joined 22 Dec, 2007

    23 plants

  • joclark

    Joclark

    joined 12 Apr, 2008

    74 plants

  • Sarah65

    Sarah65

    joined 15 Apr, 2008

    135 plants

Species of Liriope

Liriope photos

  • Liriope muscari (Liriope muscari)
    By spritzhe..

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Comments:

AndreaRichter

Andrearichter

18 Jan, 2008

 

this plant prefers a moist soil but will tolerate drought. When the leaves turn brown trim them off. They prefer an acidic soil and when the clumps get too dense, divide them. They prefer shade, partial shade. Stick with it Andrew, I'm sure they will pay you back one day.

spritzhenry

Spritzhenry

16 Jan, 2008

 

You have definitely metamorphasised (did I spell that right?) into HRH the Prince of Wales, Andrew, we all know he talks to his plants, don't we. I should try everything suggested and KEEP talking, they'll appreciate the attention! lol. I already told you some time ago, I don't do anything to mine, Nature does it. Sorry I can't help more, I know it's annoying when a plant refuses to flower.

maple

Maple

16 Jan, 2008

 

As far as I know Andrew this is a middle of the road plant in terms of water and light -not too wet/dry, not too shady/sunny. Prefers an acid soil but will tolerate alkaline.
The only thought I had was soil nutrients. Maybe you are giving them too much nitrogen in your feed/soil. If I remember rightly this inhibits flower growth and promotes foliage. Stands by to be corrected :o )
Other than that, no idea!! Good luck

majeekahead

Majeekahead

15 Jan, 2008

 

To be honest i really don't know the secret, but i did have one about 10 years ago where i used to live, and it flowered every year the whole time i was there (approx 4 years) and i did nothing to it at all. as i remeber the conditions were as follows: heavy clay soil, quite wet and semi/full shade in the winter, dry with much more sun but still some shade in the summer, and i never moved or divided it. i used a thick mulch every year as i do now in spring and autumn, but i very rarely dig deep once i have planted a bed out, i dig over properly when i am creating a new bed, or re-organising it. then i just ruff up the soil every so often and mulch and let nature take its course - it was'nt a particually good plant when i bought it, i think i got it from a bootsale with no lable or anything - i just liked it and then looked it up to get the name. so maybe you have tried too hard with it, some things are best left alone arnt they, what type of soil do you have? because when i say thick heavy clay i mean - the bigest reason i did'nt do much digging lol! or pherhaps it likes the variation in wet/dry shade/sun maybe that is the key? the only other thing i can think of is that it was a pretty sheltered spot, close to the house. hope my long winded reply is of some use to you.

spritzhenry

Spritzhenry

29 Oct, 2007

 

Sorry, Andrew but I really don't have an answer. One clump is in semi-shade and the other is mostly in the sun! Both seem happy.

AndrewR

Andrewr

29 Oct, 2007

 

OK, what do you do to this plant to get it to flower? It is one thing I have struggled with for several years. I have clumps in several spots - semi shade and full shade, moist and dry - but to no avail. One year I threatened it and every clump flowered but nothing since.