SKU: 64610458020
define tiger lily

define tiger lily Pink Tiger Lily Bulbs, Lilium

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Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 17 - Jul 22

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Description

define tiger lily Pink Tiger Lily Bulbs, LiliumIn more recent years, the hybridizers have managed to create new colors in the Tiger Lily group, maintaining the large flowers, the easy culture, the perennial qualities, and even the handsome black spots of the original Orange Tiger.' The true Tiger Lilies: Don't make a common mistake, and call just any old spotted orange lily a 'Tiger Lily.' Only one group is descended from the real thing. Like most Asian species lilies, this old reliable was a

In more recent years, the hybridizers have managed to create new colors in the Tiger Lily group, maintaining the large flowers, the easy culture, the perennial qualities, and even the handsome black spots of the original Orange Tiger.'

The true Tiger Lilies: Don't make a common mistake, and call just any old spotted orange lily a 'Tiger Lily.' Only one group is descended from the real thing. Like most Asian species lilies, this old reliable was a staple in the Oriental diet for centuries. The bulbs were--and are--cooked for foods and soups. But it's not the taste that made this lily bulb world famous. It's the beautiful flowers and the ease of growing them.

The true Tiger Lily is native to Korea, but today, gardeners the world over enjoy the beautiful big flowers on strong stems that return year after year. In fact, Tiger lilies are now so common in the US, many people think they're native.

As long as you have well-drained soil, they will grow for you, perfectly perennial even in some of America's coldest climates.

This is the lily with little black 'bulbils' (baby bulbs) that form up and down the stem in the leaf axils. These little bulbs drop to the ground naturally, and spring up the next year as baby tiger lily plants. Over the years, you'll have an expanding clump.

This is the perfect no-maintenance lily to add to your flower border or particularly, your wildflower meadow. A few towering lilies over a wild meadow in full bloom is a wonderful mid-summer sight.


Growing Lilies: True lilies (which don't include daylilies and others which are not in the genus Lilium) are easy to grow today, and more popular every season. Since they are upright and take practically no space at ground level, it's easy to plant lilies between other established perennials and shrubs. Most can also tolerate some shade, which adds versatility for the gardener. There are many lily groups, but to keep it simple, we will consider only a few of the main types that are important to gardeners. Each lily we ship includes complete instructions for planting. So don't hesitate. You can easily bring the spectacular beauty of lily flowers to any summer meadow or garden.

'Wild' Lilies or 'Species' Lilies These are the true wildflowers from the world over. They are the ones all the glamorous hybrids are descended from. We're fortunate to have some of these botanical treasures on our list of lilies this season.

Oriental Hybrid Lilies are the now famous, very fragrant ones with large, flattened flowers such as red Stargazer and white Casa Blanca. These are the ones now so popular in the floral trade, but are also very easy to grow. They bloom from mid-summer through early fall. Most have very large, outward-facing, fragrant flowers.

Asiatic Hybrid Lilies are today's largest group of garden lilies, quite easy to 'naturalize'. This growing group of lilies was begun by hybridizers in the US, and were first called 'Mid-Century Hybrids.' Compared to Orientals, the Asiatic Hybrid lilies bloom earlier (early to mid summer), the plants are shorter, the flowers a bit smaller, and most blooms are upward-facing and star-shaped. Some of the most famous Asiatic Hybrids are yellow 'Connecticut King,' and the famous red, 'Gran Paradiso.'

Tiger Lilies. This group is led by the famous old orange wild lily, which used to be called Lilium tigrinum. Botanists have changed that to Lilum lancifolium, but that doesn't stop most people (including us) from using the old name 'tigrinum.' From the original orange, the hybridizers have created new colors from white to pink. All have the large flowers, black spots, and tough perennial qualities of the original. (By the way, don't call any old spotted orange lily 'tiger lily'. This one is the real thing, and no lily common name is more mis-used.)

Trumpet Lilies Sometimes called 'Aurelian Hybrids' or other names, the large, tall trumpet lilies are all descended from The Regal Lily, a white wild species lily from China. All are incredibly fragrant, and wonderful for cutting. They grow tall, and often need staking, since a well-grown stalk can have over 15 huge flowers.

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SKU: 64610458020

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Verified Purchase
Kindle Customer
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 2
Not worth it
Size: C20
In the beginning I thought this vacuum was great. The longer I use it the more annoyed I am. At this point I often find myself using my old cannister vacuum or broom and manually mopping despite having a several hundred dollar appliance that is supposedly nearly autonomous in these tasks. Customer service has been mostly useless and often concludes the vacuum is working as it should. If this is the best it is intended to work, that's an issue. Here are the problems I've noticed: 1. Many moving parts on the underside of the robot end up winding up human hair and other debris. In most of these places, it isn't possible to disassemble to the point of easily pulling out the hair. I desire to run the vacuum once weekly for a ~1400 sq ft apartment and at this rate, once or twice a month I need to be picking at the component parts with the tip of a knife to try to wrestle the hair tourniquets off of where its wound up. If I don't do that, the vacuum is incredibly squeaky and loud. 2. Debris accumulates in the base station tray and clogs it up such that base station needs to be cleaned regularly or else the mops stay too wet and do not dry. Again this is a once or twice per month task. Otherwise you could run an entire dry cycle on the mops and still come out with soaking wet mops. Do I remember to check the mops every time to make sure they did indeed dry? No, so then soggy nasty mops sit there for a long time. Kind of defeats the purpose of self washing and drying. 3. Possibly related to the above or not, I really can't tell -- the mops start out too wet and leave little puddles that dry into unsightly water spots on the floor when it first begins mopping. Then it quickly loses all water and seems to be doing basically nothing. Adjusting the frequency of return helps slightly with the second problem but not the first, and I end up passing over with a manual mop every time to clear standing water and eliminate water spot stains. 4. Poor emptying of dustbin resulting in poor suction and accumulation of debris at the site of the base station. Seriously, half the time even on turbo suction this vacuum LEAVES more dust on rugs in its wake than it picks up. I can clean my doormat better with a quick sweep with the broom. When it gets back to the base station to empty, half the time it flings debris out from the base station at high speed and I have to sweep up its mess. Manually emptying the on-board dust bin helps, but isn't supposed to be necessary -- this thing is allegedly self emptying and certainly makes quite enough sound during the emptying phase to have you believe it is emptying the dustbin. Add one more once or twice monthly maintenance requirement that isn't supposed to be needed. 5. Dustbunnies, rather than getting sucked up, attach to various parts of the bottom of the vacuum contributing to other problems described above. As soon as it goes over a rug, the rug pulls all the dustbunnies off, now they are on your rug instead of the wood floor. If the vacuum makes it back to the base station with the dustbunnies attached, now they are clogging up the mop tray. 6. Sometimes cannot figure out how to reseat itself at home base. It finds the base station, then just gets stuck in a loop of rearing up and heading towards it and missing. I have to sometimes out it back to charge manually. All in all, it really needs a lot of attention for what is meant to be a pretty independent machine. Customer service flat out told me the mopping is functioning as expected. Gross, I don't know why you would think any customer wants puddles of water left behind that can damage wood floors or leave unsightly stains, but ok. Only ever offered to send a replacement vacuum if I pack this one up to return. If it's working properly, I don't want a replacement, I want a refund! Let me go back to my old cannister vacuum and hand mop in peace. Maybe the models at higher price points are better without these issue; I wouldn't know. Edited to add, the manufacturer reached out to me and was able to set me up to try out the S1 ad an alternative due to these concerns. I am bumping the review from one star to 2 for the strong customer service. In my opinion, the S1 is a much stronger performing vacuum/mop combo.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2025
K
Verified Purchase
Kayla P
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
Good buy
Works well with my Eufy C10, very easy to install
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Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2026
C
Verified Purchase
Cory the person
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 1
Filter is too small for full coverage
Filters are not the correct size, too small. Not worth the risk. Brush arm bristles were also all bent up.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2026
I
Verified Purchase
Ipad_user_2
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 2
Filters are the wrong size for the Eufy C10 vacuum
The air filters are smaller than the stock air filter. They will probably work if they are stretched out a bit, but as delivered, are unacceptable. The roller and the sweeper are good. Poor filter fit. Original filter size: 1.75 inch by 3.65625 inch. The filters in this set are 1.25 inch by 3.5 inch. Too small.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2026
M
Verified Purchase
meghan
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
Everything fits
All the parts fit and was a great deal
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Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2026

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