AHS Daylily E-News masthead 2
 
Volume 4 No. 1February 2011 
Daylily 'Rose F. Kennedy'
Photo of Hemerocallis 'Rose F. Kennedy' (Doorakian, 2007) by Karin Cooke 
 
Greetings!

WELCOME TO DAYLILY E-NEWS, a free electronic newsletter brought to you by the American Hemerocallis Society, also known as AHS. Daylily E-News is for all who share an interest in daylilies, including members of the American Hemerocallis Society and other horticultural organizations, educators, garden writers, news media, and others who love to garden.

Our featured photographer this issue is Karin Cooke. 
Karin lives in Exeter, New Hampshire and is president of the Patriot Daylily Society and an active member of the New England Daylily Society. She has been a member of AHS for the last 6 years. Her love of photography comes from her father who was an avid photographer and nature lover. She has always enjoyed taking photos of her gardens and nature but falling in love with daylilies took her interest in photography to a whole new level.
 
Just recently she was honored to have her photo of Hemerocallis 'J.T. Davis' (taken in her garden) chosen for the front cover of the AHS Daylily Journal. She has also been fortunate to have her photos featured in the Eureka Daylily Reference Guide. Karin enjoys sharing her photos with friends, family and fellow daylily lovers.

In this issue, Gisela Meckstroth, AHS Exhibitions Chair, takes us step-by-step through preparing for a daylily show. Also, AHS Ombudsman Donna Peck shares lots of good ideas for making club meetings more enjoyable. 

If you are interested in sponsoring an issue of the E-News, please email me at [email protected] for more information. One large ad space is available per issue, as are several of the smaller sidebar ad spaces.  
 
 
If you are not yet a Daylily E-News subscriber, sign up via the link at the AHS website:  Daylily E-News.   

For much more about daylilies and daylily events, visit the AHS website (see QUICK LINKS on the sidebar). A comprehensive Site Map is available on the site.

You may unsubscribe from Daylily E-News at any time by clicking on SafeUnsubscribe, which you will find in each issue.

We hope you enjoy Daylily E-News!


Elizabeth Trotter 
E-News Editor

 

***Special thanks to Nikki Schmith for the Daylily E-News logo*** 

AHS Announcements
Thoughts from the
AHS President
 

 

According to our bylaws, The American Hemerocallis Society, Inc. (AHS) is a non-profit organization. The AHS is organized exclusively for educational and scientific purposes, and especially to promote, encourage, and foster the development and improvement of the genus Hemerocallis and public interest therein.

 

At the start of the second year of my two-year term, I thought I'd make a few comments about the state of the Society. One of our key responsibilities is to serve as the official registration body for the naming of new daylily cultivars. We are obligated to use the guidelines published in the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants (ICNCP or Code). Our Registrar, Kevin Walek, has revised the information on our website to reflect the latest version of the Code at: http://www.daylilies.org/AHSregister.html.  Directions on how to register both online and by mail have been spelled out on the website. In addition, I am happy to report that the length of time to register a new cultivar is well within the 30-day published limit for the process. We keep working to make the online process for registering and uploading the photo of the cultivar as easy and error-free as possible.

 

Another key responsibility of the Society is to serve our members. My life's work is making and achieving specific goals and always learning new things, because any other choice means one goes backwards - there's no staying in the same place.  So to merge my own goals with the AHS's mission, we are seeking ways for the membership to grow and to continue to learn and communicate. To do this, the Technology Committee under the leadership of Mike Holmes and Mike Longo, and Sandy Holmes as our Portal Rollout Specialist, along with over 34 volunteers, are working on an enhancement to our current website. This portal is going to be an exciting and dynamic site providing a safe and secure way to communicate with other members, to learn everything you wanted to know about daylilies, to renew your membership, to participate in groups and forums, to have your own blog, and to even upload your daylily pictures to your own profile. We're hoping for this to be ready to roll out to our members by early spring, so watch for more information coming soon.

 

The Society's Treasurer will be retiring later this year. We are looking for his replacement and have formed a search committee.Resumes for a part-time independent contractor to fill this position can be sent to the Search Committee Chair, Nancy Falck, P.O. Box 192, Fairhope, AL 36533-0192 or emailed to:  [email protected]. See the advertisement for the position elsewhere in this issue.

 

With Best Wishes,

 

Mary Collier Fisher

AHS President

Advertisement for Contractor

to Serve as AHS Treasurer

 

 

Wanted:  Independent Contractor to serve

as the Treasurer of the American Hemerocallis Society

Start Date:  June 1, 2011

Applications Due:  March 31, 2011

Period of Service:  Open-ended

 

Education and experience:  Minimum of BA/BS degree.  Requires hands-on experience with QuickBooks;  experience addressing federal and state regulations impacting not-for-profit institutions, including financial and operations reporting and compensation issues for employees and independent contractors. Must be up-to-date on HTML. Helpful if individual shares an interest in the goals of the Society.

 

Interpersonal Characteristics:  Position reports on a straight-line basis to both the President and the Chief Financial Officer of the American Hemerocallis Society.  Requires ability to operate in this member-driven environment; demonstrated compliance with policies of not-for-profit organizations; and sensitivity to confidentiality and similar issues.

 

Duties include:

  • Manage receipt and administration of special funds and endowments established to provide scholarships, fund awards, etc. Handle disbursements of all funds including general and payroll.
  • Maintain corporate books and records in a manner consistent with regulatory requirements and good fiscal practices.
  • Maintain financial records using QuickBooks software.
  • File regulatory and tax reports in a timely manner.
  • Provide financial reports to management and, where appropriate, to other members in an accurate and timely manner and on a monthly or quarterly basis. 
  • Prepare reports for use by the Board of Directors at semi-annual and other meetings.
  • Maintain insurance coverage, allocate costs to regions, and pay insurer.

 

Compensation:   To be determined for part-time commitment.

 

Apply to:

Treasurer Search Committee

Nancy Falck, Chair

P.O. Box 192, Fairhope, Al 36533-0192
Telephone: 251-928-3340

Email: [email protected]

 

 

 

Region 2 Winter Meeting

Order your AHS Publications today!

 

Judging Daylilies filler pages (filler only) can be purchased from AHS Publication Sales for $16.00 postage included. The filler is sized for a standard 3-ring binder.  Also The Cumulative Awards and Honors Booklet is NOW available for $10.00, postage included for shipment within the United States. International members billed slightly more to cover the cost of postage.

 

Each year the AHS publishes a membership brochure featuring beautiful new photos of the year's daylily award winners. Daylily clubs can order up to 100 brochures free of charge and pay only for shipping. Others can order 100 brochures for $12.00 (U.S. funds; shipping within the U.S. included).

Other AHS publications are also available. The AHS Registration Checklists on CD-ROM has been updated with all the 2009 daylily registrations and pre-registrations. PC and Macintosh versions come on the same CD  $27.00 (U.S. funds; shipping within the U.S. included). Visit the AHS Publications webpage for more information or contact:

American Hemerocallis Society
c/o Jimmy Jordan
276 Caldwell Drive
Jackson TN 38301
731-422-2208
AHS Publications Manager

Make all checks payable to the American Hemerocallis Society. U.S. orders are postage paid. International orders are welcome, but please remit U.S. funds and include additional postage to cover shipping.


Not yet a member of AHS? Join today and receive a valuable daylily voucher!

 
AHS membership includes the fabulous quarterly Daylily Journal, jam-packed with informative articles and colorful photos, plus your regional newsletter at no additional cost.

The Daylily Journal
If you join AHS as a new member before September 2011, you will receive a voucher worth $25 or more to use with a participating daylily vendor
 

 
This popular program debuted in 2007, and vendors have agreed to continue for 2011. Current AHS members who upgrade their membership to a higher level will also qualify for a voucher.

 
Vendors may require a minimum purchase, and some vendors may offer a voucher of higher value than others. Members must pay shipping (and phytosanitary certificates where applicable).
 

A member may receive a voucher one time only. Upon receipt of your membership application, the AHS E
xecutive Secretary will send you a voucher along with a list of participating vendors.

 
See details at AHS Membership or use the Quick Link.

Join AHS today and discover the exciting world of daylilies!

Ask the Ombudsman
 

Donna Peck has been the Ombudsman for the American Hemerocallis Society for the past three years. An Ombudsman "is an independent, neutral party who is able to look at problems that come up in an unbiased fashion." The Ombudsman also answers questions about Society rules and procedures. Donna has been writing Ombudsman columns for regional newsletters and the Daylily E-News, and now the columns are available on the AHS website. In this series of columns, she will answer a question that may benefit not only the member who had the concern but others as well. If you have a problem, question or situation with which you need help, contact Donna at AHS Ombudsman

 

 

 

ASK THE OMBUDSMAN - Ideas For Club Meetings....Part 1

     By Donna Peck - AHS Ombudsman

 

QUESTION:  What are some ideas that can make our local club meetings interesting, educational and enjoyable?

 

I have been asked this question many times. It has been asked on the AHS Email Robin, by various members who are now is charge of programs for their club, and even by my own club's program chairman. I have asked various members for ideas and have received many terrific ones. In fact, I received so many I've prepared two columns about this subject.

 

Here is the first segment of wonderful suggestions. I hope some of you will send me more for the next column at [email protected].

 

RESPONSES: 

 

1. I think the most important answer is to make everyone feel welcome. At every meeting the club members should meet and greet all new members.  And don't forget the old members. Some people report on having attended a daylily meeting without anyone ever coming up and speaking to them. Julie Covington (AHS Chair of Awards and Honors) said, "How uncomfortable can that be!!  I can't imagine returning to a meeting where no one spoke to me, no matter how much I loved daylilies."

  

2. At the end of the year, have each club member write on a sheet of paper what they would like to see changed or have the club do during the next year. Maybe those who just sit at meetings will become more active if given a say in what the club does each year. You could take a vote on the most popular ideas and go from there.

 

3. Have a plant exchange for a meeting - but no daylilies allowed. Have members bring companion plants, perennials or even houseplants. This offers a little different "twist" but has worked very well in the clubs that have tried it.

 

4. One club has a Daylily Festival where the club sells daylilies on the city square. They show people how to plant and care for daylilies. They report that they do get new members to join the club that way. Many clubs have daylily sales along with their flower show. (We have ours at our garden center because the mall we had used won't let us sell daylilies there.) But along with the sales, they have a master gardener and a person to explain all about daylilies. The clubs usually get the plants from a reliable hybridizer and/or get freshly dug plants from their own gardens. Just make sure that the "home dug plants" are healthy, disease free, have nice clean fans and are named correctly. Our club has a special box for daylilies without names. Some of our healthy plants in our gardens lose their name tags so we name them "surprise plants" and we sell them for two dollars.

 

5. Tee Money, the new Region 14 Regional Publicity Director, is going to have a Popularity Poll party. She will send ballots to club presidents along with a CD to show all the daylilies on the ballot so the members can recognize the cultivars they vote for. Then she wants to have every club in her region have a drawing for a nice door prize for each member voting. She arranged to have one of their region's hybridizers donate two 2011 introductions for the drawing prize. Betty Parr, also from Region 14, thought about taking that theme and having popcorn and soda with the slide show. Sounds like fun, doesn't it?

 

6. An activity one club does is to provide great door prizes for attendees. Not only do they have daylilies, but also nice houseplants. Each person gets a number. The first person's number that is selected gets to choose among the prizes.They do this at the end of each meeting, and you have to be there to receive the prize.

 

7. Setting up an event or meeting with a nursery is always a popular meeting. Have the owner or a worker give the club a tour of the nursery and a talk about something that is of interest to them. Usually at the meeting the nursery will provide a discount on the purchases that day. Our club had the owner talk about companion plants among daylilies.

 

One club reported that the nursery set up a daylily day. On that day the nursery publicized the event, had experts there on growing daylilies as well as other plants, and opened the day up to everyone. That day the local daylily group had a mini flower show to let the public see the variety of daylilies. They gained new interested members and also educated the public about daylilies.

 

 8. Make sure your club posts their meetings and regional events on the regional website. The regional meetings also post on the AHS website, www.daylilies.org.  Explain special events to the newer members. One member reports that she read the regional newsletter for years before she attended a meeting. When she learned about some of the club's special events, she discovered she was missing out on a lot of fun and lots of daylilies.

 

9. One of the most popular meetings for our club is to have a hybridizer speak.  Discuss at a meeting whom they would like to meet and have as a speaker. Then find out what that speaker requires. Usually all their expenses are paid by the club. But everyone we've had present a program brought plants with them to auction off or sell, which more than covered their expenses. Have a potluck before or after the meeting so the members really get to talk to the guest. For a few of the very interested have them also meet the guest at a restaurant, maybe the night before the program.

 

10. The last idea for this segment really shouldn't be last, because it is very important:  Always have good refreshments at the meetings. We have a hospitality chair, and each meeting she sends a list around for volunteers to bring food for the following meeting. The chair has a hospitality box which contains paper plates, cups, napkins, condiments, sweetener for coffee, lemonade mix, etc. She comes early to the meetings (we hold ours at 9:30 a.m. on Saturdays) and sets up. We usually hold the meetings in members' homes, so this takes the stress off the host or hostess. We always brag that we have the best food of any meetings we attend! The men especially enjoy that part of the meeting!

 

I hope these ideas will help. I have at least another ten to share. But do send me your ideas for Part 2. I think these are valuable to recruit members, retain them and keep our veteran members happy.

 

DAYLILY SHOWS
Another Dimension of AHS

 

by Gisela Meckstroth, Exhibitions Chair

 

 

It is never too early to plan for your club's annual daylily show, not even for shows to be held in northern regions that are currently snow-covered. And it does not matter if your club has never held an accredited show or if it held one last year or in years past.

 

          Daylily Arrangement

                             Design by Karen Ciula

 

The benefits of holding an accredited daylily show are many. Here are some.

 

A show provides a forum for daylily growers to:

  • See newer registrations.
  • Compare horticultural practices.
  • Encourage the upgrading of collections.
  • Reacquaint themselves with some of their favorite daylilies.
  • Allow hybridizers/exhibitors to earn AHS medals, rosettes, and ribbons where merited.

A show provides a forum for stimulating public interest in the:

  • Merits of growing daylilies in gardens.
  • Advances in color, form and size of daylilies.
  • Work of area hybridizers and their new cultivars and seedlings.
  • Encouragement of youth to grow, hybridize, and show daylilies.
  • Visiting of daylily gardens.
  • Use of daylilies in flower arrangements.

A show provides a means for hybridizers to:

  • Exhibit their newer cultivars.
  • Receive feedback from judges about their seedlings.
  • Compete for AHS Major Awards.
  • Have their winning cultivars and seedlings published in The Daylily Journal and their regional newsletter.
  • Have their names and winning entries published on the AHS Awards & Honors pages.

Most of all, daylily shows provide:

  • Opportunities for club members to learn about judging daylilies.
  • Exceptional opportunities to recruit new club members!

          Daylily Show

  

The club's show chairs and their show committee chairs don't have to work by themselves without receiving help in all areas of the show process. Each January, the exhibitions chair begins mailing a preliminary show application packet to show chairs or clubs who plan to hold a daylily show.

 

 

The Preliminary Show Accreditation Packet Contains:

  1. A letter to show chairs discussing important points.
  2. The show accreditation forms (including a show supplies order form).
  3. A request form for ordering 100 colorful free AHS Membership Brochures that can be made available at the daylily show.
  4. A "Request for Certificate of Insurance" instructions page and form.
  5. A sample generic show schedule.
  6. A guide for writing a show schedule.
  7. A "how-to" instruction sheet for using the online AHS database (Classification).
  8. A "how-to" instruction sheet for using Dr. Stanton's Tabulation Program (how to use, how to save the files, etc.).
  9. A "how-to" instruction sheet for generating daylily lists; for example, a list of multi-form cultivars, no-size-recorded cultivars, spiders, etc.
  

Each January, the exhibitions chair also posts the forms and information sheets contained in that packet on the AHS website at Daylily Show Materials.

 

 

Daylily Show Forms and Information Available for Downloading from the AHS Web Pages:

 

The daylily show materials posted on the website include all the above named documents plus one extra item. That is a Sample Generic Show Schedule (taken directly from the AHS Judging Daylilies Handbook [2010 edition], Chapter 4: Exhibitions) in MICROSOFT WORD format. The purpose of making that electronic file available is to allow new show schedule committee chairs to use this file and simply fill in the respective club's information.

 

 

Here is a quick overview/summary of our 2010 AHS accredited daylily shows:

  • Total number of accredited shows held in our regions: 55
  • Total number of AHS members in sponsoring organizations: 2,988 (68%)
  • Total number of members in sponsoring organizations: 4,388
  • Total number of visitors attending shows: 14,130
  • Total number of new AHS members recruited during daylily shows: 70
  • Total number of scapes exhibited: 10,084

 

Note: The unusually cool growing season temperatures of 2010 in southern regions resulted in the cancellation of several scheduled shows. For a description, refer to Region 14's newsletter, The Dixie Daylily, Vol. 54, No. 2, page 33. For the Mobile Hemerocallis Society, for example, it was the first show cancellation in 50 years.

   

Eight clubs have already requested that the preliminary "Request for Show Accreditation" information packet be sent. One of the clubs has already ordered show supplies!           

 

If you are interested in having your club sponsor an accredited show, please contact:

 

Gisela Meckstroth

AHS Exhibitions Chair

2122 Watontrail Drive

Reynoldsburg OH 43068-8242

Tel: 614-864-0132

Email:

[email protected]

or

[email protected]

 

                 2010 Tricolor Award

             2010 Tricolor Award by Vada de Jongh
 

 
 
The American Hemerocallis Society, Inc., is a non-profit corporation organized exclusively for educational and scientific purposes, and especially to promote, encourage, and foster the development and improvement of the genus Hemerocallis and public interest therein.
AHS Daylily E-News Committee: Elizabeth Trotter (KY), Editor, E-News; Mary Baker (NE); Sue Bergeron (ON, Canada); Mary Collier Fisher (MA); David Kirchhoff (KY); MaryAnn Pruden (PA), Press Releases; Lynn Stoll (IA); Maureen Strong (ON, Canada).
 
Daylily E-News � 2011 by the American Hemerocallis Society, Inc.

 

Daylily 'J.T. Davis'

Hemerocallis 'J.T. Davis' (Grace-L., 1999).  Click photo for larger image.

 

 
In This Issue
AHS President's Message
Region 2 Winter Meeting
Ask the Ombudsman
Daylily Shows
Spelling Lesson
Locate an AHS Group Near You!
AHS Media Library
Why You Should Join AHS
What is a Daylily?
How to Register a Daylily
Donations and Endowments
Order AHS Publications
DAYLILY E-NEWS Archives
QUICK LINKS
AHS Home Page

Join AHS

 
Daylily World Ad 2011 

 

Daylily 'Belle Cook'

Hemerocallis 'Belle Cook' (Brooker, 2001).  Click photo for larger image.

 

SPELLING LESSON
 

How to spell
"daylily"
 

The word "daylily" is properly spelled as one word. Many of today's spellcheckers and media style books incorrectly use the old-fashioned spelling "day lily" instead. The single word has been the preferred spelling for decades.

 


 

Globe
Locate an AHS group near you!

The American Hemerocallis Society is all about daylilies and people.

AHS is organized into 15 Regions including USA, Canada, and International designations. Each offers a variety of regional and local club daylily activities.

When people join AHS, they also become a member of the AHS Region in which they live. AHS Regions do not charge additional dues. Most AHS regions publish their own newsletter and mail it to all regional members at no extra charge. Members often participate in events outside their own region.

To learn about daylily activities and events near you, visit the webpage:
AHS Regional Activities



Keyboard
The AHS Media Library
Easy programs for your club--

OR...

add your presentation to the Library!

By Nikki Schmith
AHS Media Librarian
AHS Region 2, Michigan


One benefit of your American Hemerocallis Society (AHS) membership is access to rental programs from the AHS Media Library for club presentations, public education events, and personal use.

Over the last decade or two, AHS collected and organized presentations on traditional slide media and made them available for rental to AHS members. Many members took advantage of this easy way to offer entertaining and educational programs to their clubs.

In recent years, we saw a decline in the rental of these traditional 35mm slide programs. In the interest of supporting our educational mission and providing more people access to these programs, a conversion to digital media began.

Today, rental programs are available on CD in Microsoft (MS) PowerPoint format. Each program has a $10 rental fee (unless indicated otherwise); return postage and insurance are not included.
For a listing of programs currently available, go to:


 
AHS Media Library
 

There are several great choices, but with an organization our size, we should have more: more to provide to outside, like-minded organizations to spread the news about daylilies; more to provide to local clubs to continue the excitement about daylilies; and finally, more to document where we've been, because we are headed into the future so fast.

With the exception of the classic Sarah Sikes presentation, "Gardening with Daylilies," all of the original 35mm slide programs have been archived and are not available for rental at this time. Some are being considered for digital conversion in the coming years, while others will reside in the AHS archive.

If you have developed any programs, please consider sending a copy to the AHS Media Librarian if you are willing to have it rented to members. You can allow such use without giving up your copyright to the images if that is a concern to you. A Deed of Gift form can be provided in that case, covering the use and disposition. No special formatting or programming is required. You could simply send in a CD of labeled images or a completely formatted and animated PowerPoint. You could send in a presentation you've done on hybridizing, dividing, planting or designing with daylilies. You could send in a presentation on conducting a daylily exhibition. The possibilities are endless!

If you are interested in the library in any way, such as donating, renting, and volunteering to help, or if you have questions, please contact the Media Librarian, Nikki Schmith at AHS Media Librarian, or call 248-739-9006.

We look forward to a deluge of presentation
s!

 

Daylily 'Ava Gardner'
Hemerocallis
 'Ava Gardner'
(Smith-FR, 2006).  Click photo for larger image.

 
Why Join AHS?
Learn about daylilies.

Receive the quarterly publication, The Daylily Journal.


Receive a regional newsletter 2-3 times per year.


Meet daylily growers and hybridizers.


Vote for favorite daylilies in the Popularity Poll.


Participate in daylily exhibitions.


Become an AHS Exhibition Judge.


Become an AHS Garden Judge.


Have an AHS Daylily Display Garden and/or AHS Historic Daylily Display Garden.


Attend daylily symposiums, garden tours, meetings, conventions, and more.


Participate in on-line discussion groups.


Join special interest snail-mail groups.


Become a better gardener.


Form friendships for life!


AHS members belong to one of 15 U.S./Canadian regions. Those outside the U.S. and Canada may join as International members. Over 180 local clubs form the backbone of every region, and you may find that one of them is near you. If not, meet with local gardeners and form a daylily club of your own!

It's easy to become a member. Just use this link: Join AHS

 

Daylily 'Victorian Garden Star Bright'
Hemerocallis
'Victorian Garden Star Bright' (Brooker-G., 2007). Click photo for
larger image.

What is a Daylily?
A daylily is an herbaceous perennial that will return year after year in a suitable climate. Some are evergreen and will retain their green foliage throughout the year in a mild climate.

Daylilies may be hardy or tender, depending on genetics, so gardeners should choose cultivars based on their local growing conditions.


Daylilies belong to the genus Hemerocallis, from the Greek meaning "beauty for a day." A typical daylily bloom lasts for one day, but an established clump will produce many flowering scapes with plentiful buds that will produce a fresh flush of blooms over many days.

Daylilies do not form bulbs (as do members of the genus Lilium, otherwise known as "true" lilies).

Due to the distinctive characteristics of Hemerocallis, taxonomists have removed daylilies from the family Liliaceae and placed them in their own family Hemerocallidaceae.

Daylilies form a crown, with fibrous roots below and foliage and flowering scapes above. The daylily crown is the essential growth center of the plant. Neither true daylily root structures nor daylily foliage will grow without a piece of the crown.

Some daylilies form rhizomes -- special underground structures with scales and internodes -- that can produce new plants. The species or "wild" types often have this trait. Many modern hybrids do not form rhizomes, although there are some that do.


For more daylily terms, see the AHS Daylily Dictionary.



Daylily Registrations

The AHS Registrar  handles all registrations of new daylily cultivars for AHS, which is the registering body for all Hemerocallis worldwide under rules for the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants (ICNCP).

Registrations may be made on line or by mail. For more information, see:

Daylily Cultivar Registration

Questions?
Contact:
Kevin P. Walek
9122 John Way
Fairfax Station, VA 22039-3042
703-798-5501(cell)
703-646-4904 (home-office)
OR
Send email to:
Registrar



Check Book

Donations

Donations to the American Hemerocallis Society are always appreciated. There are five different funds from which to choose, including an endowment fund, scientific studies fund, youth funds, and a scholarship fund.   

Donations may be made online or by mail. For more information, see:
 
 
 
Questions?
Contact:
Mary Lou Lundblade
511 W. Ness
Valley Center, KS 67147-4920
316-755-1964
 
from Dec. 1 to Apr. 1:
Unit 202
102 E. Pleasant Street
Avon Park, FL 33825
863-452-2612
 
OR:
Send email to:
Endowments Chair



Order AHS Daylily Books, CDs, and More
As an educational service, AHS publishes The Daylily Journal and a number of other items, available at or near cost. To order online, go to:

AHS Publications


For Previous Issues of DAYLILY E-NEWS Visit the Archives:
DAYLILY E-NEWS ARCHIVES