Showing posts with label Hosta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hosta. Show all posts

April Interest Plants

Come, gentle Spring! Ethereal Mildness! Come... James Thomson


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Feedback - contact.tcg.now@gmail.com
References - Find out more about James Thomson
Special Thanks
Special Thanks to Town & Country Gardens Contributors: seyed mostafa zamani / CC 2.0, dive-angel (Karin), flickr, Jasmine&Roses, L. B. J. Wildflower Center/Texas University, Rita Crane Photography. Rita Crane, daughter of LIFE magazine photographer Ralph Crane. Her work can be seen on Flickr at Rita Crane Photography or on her website., TMR Davies, Wikipedia, W.D. Williams

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Hosta - Giboshi, Plantain Lily, Funkia

Origins - N. E. Asia
Type Perennial (herbaceous)
Hardiness Zones 3 - 8
Bloom Spring
Height 1 to 2 ft (30 - 60 cm)

Cultivation
Hosta likes rich, loamy, moist, and well drained, soils. It is shade tolerant.

Propagation
By rhizome division.

Other
Edible blooms.
Named after Nicholas Thomas Host, Austrian botanist, Hosta provides incredibly rich, green, ground covering foliage, and pretty blooms in the Spring & early Summer.
Try inter planting it with low, and evergreen ground cover such as Ajuga (Ajuga reptans), or deciduous trees, for more interest.
There are plenty of cultivars to choose from, -different leaf shapes, and sizes, plain or variegated foliage, different bloom colors, and of course there are fragrant, and non
-fragrant varieties to suit every taste.
For more information on Hosta, please see links to American Hosta Society, and British Hosta and Hemerocallis Society, in References, below.

Back to April Interest Plants page

Feedback - contact.tcg.now@gmail.com
References - Find more about: Hardiness Zones, Hostas, from American Hosta Society , and British Hosta and Hemerocallis Society
Special Thanks
Special Thanks to Town & Country Gardens Contributors: - American Hosta Society, blogger, British Hosta and Hemerocallis Society, dive-angel (Karin), flickr, Jasmine&Roses, Martha {Dancing Monkey Jewelry}, Rita Crane Photography. Rita Crane, daughter of LIFE magazine photographer Ralph Crane. Her work can be seen on Flickr at Rita Crane Photography or on her website., TMR Davies, wackyweeder, W.D. Williams, Youkali2006

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