Lillies within my patio?? Ok so I ahve these lillies in my side yard and I...

Ok so I ahve these lillies in my side yard and I dont know what nice they are but they are turning orange about in a minute.anywho I natices that growing on the leaves there are little black seeds.I be wondering if these are ok to pick about now and plant them elsewhere? Anyone know what this lily is call? please and thank you!
All lillies grow from bulbs. I don't assume those are seeds you are seeing on your plants. Maybe some kind of bug?


The lillies grow from bulbs which can be separated (fall is the best time once the flowers have wilted) and replanted surrounded by other places around your yard and the bulbs will continue to produce more respectively year and you can just continue this process if you want to enjoy a yard full of lillies. The black seedlike looking things on the flower (I think that is to say what you mean) may propagate your lillies (I don't know this for sure) in some other way, but it won't propagate your lillies as efficiently as replanting the bulbs will. The lily in the photo is an Asiatic lily
The photos below of the Pink flowers are Stargazer Lily's which are also Asiatic Lily's.
http://images.scour.yahoo.com/search/im...
Also
http://www.thelilygarden.com/pages_lilie...
The photos in this link are Daylilies/ Please NOTE the difference within the leaves of the Day and Asiatic lily's
http://www.flickr.com/photos/22704727(a)N0...

I wouldn't pick now just agree to them reseed themselves and next year when they are about 6" high replant elsewhere.
Answers:    from this site.

http://forums.gardenweb.com/forums/load/...

"These bulbils (not seeds) that grow between the leaf and stem can be taken from the stem as soon as the flower has faded but it's my benevolent that they shouldn't be allowed to dry out. Plant them about 1/2" to 1" deep surrounded by good potting soil as soon as you harvest them. They purloin 2 to 3 years to get to blooming size after planting. They will be clones of the mother plant, not crosses like you achieve with true seeds. If the soil underneath the lilies is good and not mulched too heavily, the bulbils that fall may lift root and grow on their own. Just another marval of mother nature!"

see pic here...

http://digdeep.ornamentals-edibles.com/2...
It could be a star gazer lily they are my favorite! They don't have seeds, they are bulbs. They are dormant during the winter and come out every year during their season. You don't own to re-plant them, because they will multiply on their own. Best of luck! Hope that helps! Sounds like a blacberry lily to me.
Stargazer lillies are a deep pink. These are Asiatic lillies - I don't know the exact type. They bloom in the precipitate summer and like sun. After they finish blooming you can dig up the bulbs and replant them. These types of lillies reproduce to some extent quickly so don't be surprised if you have even more subsequent year. It's a Tiger Lily. See the picture below. The black dots on the flower are just part of the flower. The seed will be inside the big seed pod left losing when the flower dies. The black dots are where the name Tiger Lily comes from as they are black and the flowers are red.