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Hey There! I’m Rochelle Greayer. I’m a garden designer on TV and IRL. I’m also an author and entrepreneur who thinks she can save the world by teaching everyone a little something about landscape design.

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50 Natives: Nevada – Calochortus nuttalli – Sego Lily

6/08/2010

Calochortus nuttallii sego lily

image by solitude48

Indian legend has it that many, many suns ago when the native american indians lived in great numbers in the western US, life was abundant.  But the indians became jealous of each other and they traded stick games for tomahawks and they began to war.  The Great Spirit was displeased and he dried up the corn and berries – the earth refused to yield.  The Indians sorrowed and prayed to the Great Spirit. One day the sun shone bright up on the hills, and the people saw a little plant growing everywhere. When the Indians tasted the root, they knew the Great Spirit had saved them, and ever after, they refused to fight where the Sego Lily grew. They called it the ‘Little Life Plant of the Hills’.”

Calochortus nuttallii sego lily

1. Sego Lily – Calochortus nuttallii, 2. Sego Lily, Calochortus nuttalli

The Sego Lily is a beautiful native plant that is protected in Utah (where it is the state flower).  If you love the look, you can plant it or other varieties of chalohortus that are a bit more flexible regarding restrictions.   It grows 10-20 in. high, from an onion-like bulb. One to three very showy, white to lavender-blue, tulip-like flowers are borne atop the stem in an umbel-like cluster.  It is a fascinating plant because it literally plants it’s self.   Below ground, the Sego Lily has an amazing mechanism to move its bulb through the soil to an optimal depth. Following germination at or near the soil surface, the small bulb slowly moves deeper into the soil by contractile roots until it reaches a depth of 10 cm or more.

There are only 2 states left in the native plant series….South Dakota and Texas.  I am not sure what to replace this feature with.  What do you think? I could start all over again with 50 more plants from 50 states, move abroad, or perhaps try something else all together.  You ideas or thoughts are, as always, happily accepted and considered.

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  1. Sheila H says:

    I miss your series with the artist dresses/outfits and matching the design with flowers, furniture and accessories. I’m sure it is a lot of work but it is so different from what everybody else does in their garden blogs.

  2. Trisha says:

    wow! really lovel pictures!

  3. rochelle says:

    Sheila – I miss that series too…I have been thinking of bringing it back…but you are correct…the main reason for letting it go was the immense amount of time it took to put each together….always juggling..

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