By Melissa Schiller
Ahhhh yellow iris. Our love hate relationship continues.
Of course this is just our personal opinion. Talking from experiencing garden visitors to Smokin Heights many people either like the colour yellow or they strongly do not. We personally do not like the colour yellow. In saying that we do not strive to hybridize yellow; however, we have had numerous nice seedlings pop up. We know that to make a good iris it needs many things. Branching, stem proportion, buds, growth habits just to name a few attributes. We aren't that silly to pass a good iris seedling up just based on colour alone.
We also find that showing yellow iris is also extremely hard purely on the manicure of the iris for the show bench. Bugs leave all sorts of dirty damage to the bloom that can be extremely hard to clean, which for us is time consuming as we bench many iris.
Photography can also be difficult because yellow is such a clean bright colour. It is not as easy to hide or camouflage damage like rips, holes and dirty marks from bugs as it is the darker coloured iris.
If the photo is not taken in the first day of the bloom opening the edges of the petals tend to go off colour hence the colour is slightly off not depicting the bloom at its best!
Last season we noticed which yellows were the most popular at Smokin Heights here we go:
Of course this is just our personal opinion. Talking from experiencing garden visitors to Smokin Heights many people either like the colour yellow or they strongly do not. We personally do not like the colour yellow. In saying that we do not strive to hybridize yellow; however, we have had numerous nice seedlings pop up. We know that to make a good iris it needs many things. Branching, stem proportion, buds, growth habits just to name a few attributes. We aren't that silly to pass a good iris seedling up just based on colour alone.
We also find that showing yellow iris is also extremely hard purely on the manicure of the iris for the show bench. Bugs leave all sorts of dirty damage to the bloom that can be extremely hard to clean, which for us is time consuming as we bench many iris.
Photography can also be difficult because yellow is such a clean bright colour. It is not as easy to hide or camouflage damage like rips, holes and dirty marks from bugs as it is the darker coloured iris.
If the photo is not taken in the first day of the bloom opening the edges of the petals tend to go off colour hence the colour is slightly off not depicting the bloom at its best!
Last season we noticed which yellows were the most popular at Smokin Heights here we go:
'Irish Jester' (Blyth 2019) |
'Woven Sunlight; (Blyth 2015) |
'Only A Dream' (Blyth 2019) |
'Bamboo Shadows' (Keppel 06) |
'Endless Sunshine; (Blyth 15) |
'Smart Money; (Ghio 10) |
'Mac 'n' Cheese' (Johnson 16) |
'Sun Shine In' (Keppel 10) |
These placings are based on Smokin Heights personal opinion on how the plants perform when grown in our garden.
What are some of your favourite yellow hybrids? We would love to know!
We sincerely hope you are keeping well in these challenging times. We love seeing all the garden and iris photos from around the world on Facebook. Social Media is keeping us all in touch with each other and enables us to share our passion. Keep up the great work!