Last spring I really had to wrestle with my toadlilies to separate them and they seemed to take the rest of the year to get over the trauma. They did bloom, but not as profusely as in the past. This spring, however, they're coming back with a vengeance, having spread a few inches to send up an outlier under the downspout, and a bit further to send another outlier where I had some begonias last year. I may put just one begonia in that spot this year, and let the toad lilies fill in the rest.
The foliage isn't particularly noteworthy, but when it blooms in October, the flowers are well worth the wait - like stems full of little orchids, lavender with tiny purple "freckles". The fact that it likes shade and damp is a bonus. If I thought the deer would leave it alone, I'd take some out to the cabin and plant it in the beds with the hellebores. Actually, given that the deer find something in the hellebores to be an irritant, maybe I could plant the toadlilies behind them and let the hellebores "stand sentry" over them.
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