Home and Garden Advice
Search:
spacer
spacer
spacer

spacer
Appliances
Awnings and Conservatories
Baby Nursery
Basements
Bathrooms
Building a Home
Buying a Home
Cabinets
Carpet and Flooring
Ceiling Fans
Christmas Decorating
Clocks
Closet Organizers
Composting
Concrete
Curtains
Decks Patios and Gazebos
Decorating
DIY Home Improvement Links
Do It Yourself
Doors Windows and Shutters
Drywall and Plaster
Electrical
Fences and Fencing
Fireplaces and Chimney
Fountains and Waterfalls
Furniture
Gardening
Getting Organized
Greenhouses
Hardwood Flooring
Hiring a Contractor
Home & Building Inspections
Home Cooling
Home Heating and Cooling
Home Improvement and Maintenance
Home Insurance
Home Safety
Home Security
Home Theatre
Home Values
Hot Tubs and Saunas
Insulation
In The Backyard
Interior Decorating
Kitchens
Landscaping
Lawn Care
Log Homes
Money Saving Tips
Mortgages Loans & Financing
Outdoor Projects
Painting
Pest Control
Plumbing
Ponds and Water Features
Power Tools
Real Estate
Roofing
Roofers and Roofing Repair
Selling a Home
Sheds and Outbuildings
Siding
Solar Power
Spas
Surround Sound
Swimming Pools
Tools
Utilities
Water Conservation
Water Leaks and Mold
Window Blinds
Woodworking

Newest Articles
Most Popular Articles
spacer
spacer
Previous PageHomepage

Hostas – Plantain Lily



Hostas, commonly known as the plantain lily, own so many distinctive characteristics that it’s difficult to pinpoint which of them has pushed it ahead of the day lily (Hemerocallis) as the most sought after herbaceous perennial for the home garden in the US.

A low maintenance plant, shade tolerant, and hardy in zones three through nine, there are currently over 2500 species of hostas available. Native to the Orient, hostas were first imported to Europe in the late 1700’s and made their way across the Atlantic in mid 19th century.

One interesting fact about hostas is that they don’t reach full maturity until between their fourth and eighth year. Moreover, with each season hostas clumps become larger and wider, colors become more intense and leaf patterns acquire wider variegations, dimples, and other traits like seer suckering.

Grown primarily for foliage, hostas leaves may be either solid in color or variegated and are enough to add a rainbow to any garden with colors that include white, ivory, gold, green and even blue. Moreover, a single cultivar may exhibit striking differences in its foliage, depending on the amount of sun it receives.

In addition, hostas bloom in summer with lavender to white lily-like flowers on tall spikes. Those hybridized from Hosta plantaginea not only carry


6-inch long white flowers but add a delicate fragrance to your flower garden as well.

However, as could be expected with a genus so rich in cultivars, hostas come in all kinds of sizes. The miniature “Baby Bunting” reaches only a few inches in diameter at maturity while some cultivars may span eight feet across.

Although widely available at nurseries and garden centers, most often hostas are propagated by lifting and dividing mature plants in late summer.

Hostas grow best in a location that receives morning sun and afternoon shade. Soil should be slightly acidic but rich in nutrients and organic matter. Plant hostas at least a foot deep. Because the shallow root clump spread horizontally and equal the diameter of the foliage, planting holes should be about 1 ˝ the size you expect from the mature clump.

Hostas like water. Keep new plantings well watered for the first two weeks. After that, your hostas will benefit from a deep (1-inch minimum) weekly watering, which aids in healthy root development. Symptoms of inadequate moisture are leaf tip burning and drooping.

About the Author

Linda is the lead author of Gardening Guides Hundreds of articles on Flower Gardening, Vegetable and Fruit Gardening, Garden Design Ideas and tips

Related Articles

SMARTEN YOUR INTERIORS
Interior design is the process of shaping the experience of interior space, through the manipulation of the available volume as well as surface treatment. Interior Design is dependent on environmental psychology, architecture,...

10 Free Gardening Products!
One of the pleasurable spin-offs in organic gardening is finding alternative ways of coming up with the same, if not better, end result..... Household throwaways can be valuable to the alternate enthusiast. Here are ten recyclable ideas to make...

5 Pieces of Equipment Gardeners Can’t Live Without
Gardening is fun and rewarding and may be considered a hobby, talent or both and sometimes it’s just luck. Gardening is not as easy as it looks and involves dedication, time and consistency and many trials and errors. There are many aspects to...

 

spacer
Home and Garden Advice
spacer
Website © Copyright 2006 Home and Garden Advice.com | Contact
spacer