“What’s new?”

by Bob Solberg

I often run into high-powered plant people, much more knowledgeable than me, who ask, “Haven’t hosta hybridizers done about all you can do with hostas? They all are starting to look the same to me.” I guess that is true if you discount all the new red blushing hostas but then, the novelty may wear off even blushers one day.

            I often wonder what is the next big improvement that hybridizers can bring to their hosta seedlings. Red is not dead. Hostas can still become redder, but also the red can last all season. I’d say, Dan Heims’ ‘Liam’s Smile’ is a more dependable blushing hosta in warmer climes with interestingly more purple in the leaf veins than in the petioles. It is a new ingredient to add to the hybridizing pot.   

‘Liam’s Smile’ in North Carolina

Some hosta hybridizers think hosta flowers might be the next best thing. They are producing many new colors for hosta flowers, rich dark purples, even black, light pinks, and reds, as well as yellow and green. I have seen brown ones too, interesting but looking faded when fresh. Large, pink flowers on a blue hosta might be a showstopper.

            But flowers and red trim are accessories, much like the messy ruffles on many of the new blue hostas these days. Maybe that is where we are with the breeding right now, just a little tweak here and little tweak there. Hosta specialists might appreciate these new bells and whistles, but they may be lost on the gardening public or even high-level horticulturists.

            So, what is really new in hostas? Well, have you ever seen a yellow hosta that turns blue? Yellow hostas usually green up a little, or a lot, later in the season. They almost never have a blue cast to them. That’s different! For many years we just called it 44B, a great hybridizing hosta, a parent of ‘Ruby Earrings’ and ‘Peach Brandy’, and now I am ready to pass it along to you. It is ‘Calm before the Storm’, bright yellow sunshine in early spring and then suddenly an afternoon storm brewing. Its rich purple petioles highlight the spring yellow color and the stormy summer feel. Check it out in the shop. I think it is pretty cool!

‘Calm before the Storm’

Flower Power

Blog 4: Flower Power

Hi again. This has been a crazy year here at Green Hill Farm shipping hostas. That is not a bad thing. Believe it or not Erin and I slipped in and out of Iowa a week ago. In the Country Garden and Gifts in Independence has an event every summer that features some of the best new hostas on the market and a few words from me. This year I talked, at Josh’s request, about the hybridizing process that produced my red hostas.

Speaking of red hostas, while the emphasis is always on the petioles and leaves, many red hostas have awesome scapes and flowers. I do not blame you if you cut the flowers off your grandma’s hostas as they appear. They are gangly and flop everywhere, but new hostas have amazing scapes and flowers, and if you really must remove them, then bring them inside as a cut flower bouquet. They will last for a week or more.

The Japanese are far ahead of us in creating interesting hosta flowers. ‘Miracle Lemony’ is a light yellow flowered hosta. They also have many doubled flowered hostas and colors that range from brown to red to green and all shades of purple in between. Often it is the patterns of stripes inside of the flower, the runway for bees to land, that is the most highly colored. Take a peek sometime.  

But do you really care? After all, hostas are foliage plants, and in temperate climates some of the best. Maybe flowers are not your passion, but scapes are cool especially as they emerge. Here is a look at a couple of seedlings of mine that I keep just for their colorful bloom scapes. They will probably never be introduced as the leaves are nondescript for hostas are bought for their foliage and not for their flowers, at least not yet.