If you live where the temperature drops below freezing in the wintertime and have a small pond, you will need to store your water lilies to prevent them from freezing. If your pond is over six feet deep, you can leave them in your pond, but if not, you will need to remove the plants and bring them indoors. You can store them in a basement or storage closet as long as they are completely covered with water. They should be in a covered container, so that the light does not stimulate them to grow. After the last frost, you can return them to your pond.
No, they die off.
Growth is shut down in winter. New growth will reappear when Spring returns.
Water Lilies Food was created in 1995.
Some might, but there is different kinds.
Turtles and koi will eat water lilies. Dogs and raccoons will break the pots that water lilies grow in and cause damage. Aphids and snails also cause damage to water lilies.
Lilies eat soil, water, nature and algae.
Pond weed does not eat water lilies, but it does require a large amount of oxygen which often chokes the lilies out of the pond.
Tiger lilies are able to grow in cold countries as well as Asia. Tiger lilies do not have to be protected in winter.
The Water Lilies pictures have always been great favorites.
The water lilies have thick, fleshy creeping underwater stems that are buried in the mud.
Water Lilies - 1911 was released on: USA: 13 January 1911
Yes, water lilies attract insects. See related link below for pictures of water lilies with insects on them.