- 1). Fill a pot with seed-starter mix late winter to early spring. Irrigate it until water flows from the planter's drainage holes.
- 2). Push the tiger lily seed into the soil to a depth four times its width. Cover the hole with seed-starter mix. Irrigate the surface to moisten the seed.
- 3). Place the pot in a cold frame if you have one. A cold frame is like a mini-greenhouse, a box with a clear cover to allow the sun in. Alternatively, cover the planter with clear plastic film and set it in a sunny location.
- 4). Check the soil moisture daily. Irrigate it whenever the surface begins to dry. Germination occurs within two to four weeks.
- 1). Loosen the soil around a tiger lily plant in the fall before the ground freezes. Push the blade deeper each time you work the shovel around the plant.
- 2). Dig the bulb cluster out of the ground once you reach under the plant's root system. After you plant a tiger lily bulb, it reproduces underground, forming new bulbs attached to the oldest one.
- 3). Pull the young bulbs off the original one to pry them apart.
- 4). Loosen the soil in a well-drained spot that offers partial shade. Dig holes with a depth twice the height of the new bulbs and replant them. Water them once at planting. Begin to give the plants 1 inch water weekly when stalks bearing flower buds sprout in spring.
Seed Propagation
Bulb Division
SHARE