In the real world, lily pads are the leaves of the Nymphaeaceae family of flowering plants – better known as “water lilies”. There are about 70 different species, found all over the world, including Victoria amazonica – the giant water lily, whose pads can be large as three metres across(!). Their flowers are white the first night they’re open and become pink the second night.
The giant water lily was the subject of major rivalry between gardeners of Victorian England. There was stiff competition between the gardeners of the Dukes of Devonshire and Northumberland as to who could be the first to get one to flower. In the end, Joseph Paxton (for the Duke of Devonshire) won the competition in November 1849, by replicating the lily’s natural environment using coal-fired boilers. The lilies’ ribbed underside later inspired Paxton’s designs for the Crystal Palace.
Water lilies are symbolic to many cultures. They’re the national flowers of Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Guyana, and the state flower of Andra Pradesh in India. Lily pads are also seen in Northern European heraldry, most notably on the flag of Friesland and the coat of arms of Denmark. In both cases, they’re coloured red and so look like little hearts instead.
So there you have it – if you want to win a gardener’s heart, get them a lily pad. There’s no finer aquatic flower.
Share this story