Sunday, January 24, 2010
A cold afternoon here on the mountain. Just back from snowshoeing in the woods with Gail and Michelle. It was nice out there but now I notice the temperature and barometer are dropping and the wind is coming up. Guess the storm that was talked about is heading this way.
33 degrees might not be a temperature at which to be thinking about hostas but despite the cold I have been spending lots of time on that subject lately. For those of you who ever visited us when Vermont Flower Farm was located at our house, you'll remember a fine hosta and shade garden that started by the driveway and mailboxes and traveled down along the road and into and around an old barn foundation.
Over the past year and a half I have been developing a new hosta display garden at the nursery and it should begin to show some maturity this season. Visitors commented regularly about missing the opportunity to see mature examples of hostas they were interested in purchasing as well as hostas that we didn't have for sale but were growing on for future sales. It was a good fit for everyone.
I finally decided that our website should include every hosta we grow, and should indicate whether it's just on display or available for sale. Now that I am most of the way through this I am doubting myself and just hope it will not cause confusion. We do have a nice collection and the several hundred we offer for sale is a larger number than most nurseries around here. You'll have to check out the site when it's finished and come visit and then make your own decision. Three resources to help you with hosta decisions are the American Hosta Society, the New England Hosta Society and the Hosta Library. Give them a try.
One of the most commonly found hostas in garden centers, public gardens and gardener's personal gardens is Elegans. This is a large hosta which many are thinking of when they tell me "I want one of those big blue hostas I see in all the magazines." Up top is a picture of Elegans as it breaks through the soil when spring temperatures begin to rise. As the leaves unfurl and temperatures change, the leaves begin to grow and a very nice plant develops.
33 degrees might not be a temperature at which to be thinking about hostas but despite the cold I have been spending lots of time on that subject lately. For those of you who ever visited us when Vermont Flower Farm was located at our house, you'll remember a fine hosta and shade garden that started by the driveway and mailboxes and traveled down along the road and into and around an old barn foundation.
Over the past year and a half I have been developing a new hosta display garden at the nursery and it should begin to show some maturity this season. Visitors commented regularly about missing the opportunity to see mature examples of hostas they were interested in purchasing as well as hostas that we didn't have for sale but were growing on for future sales. It was a good fit for everyone.
I finally decided that our website should include every hosta we grow, and should indicate whether it's just on display or available for sale. Now that I am most of the way through this I am doubting myself and just hope it will not cause confusion. We do have a nice collection and the several hundred we offer for sale is a larger number than most nurseries around here. You'll have to check out the site when it's finished and come visit and then make your own decision. Three resources to help you with hosta decisions are the American Hosta Society, the New England Hosta Society and the Hosta Library. Give them a try.
One of the most commonly found hostas in garden centers, public gardens and gardener's personal gardens is Elegans. This is a large hosta which many are thinking of when they tell me "I want one of those big blue hostas I see in all the magazines." Up top is a picture of Elegans as it breaks through the soil when spring temperatures begin to rise. As the leaves unfurl and temperatures change, the leaves begin to grow and a very nice plant develops.
Writing from the mountain above Peacham Pond where two more degrees have ticked off the temperature and January 24th has inched closer to night.
Warm Gardening Wishes!
George Africa
The Vermont Gardener
Vermont Flower Farm A website-update-in-progress where some hosta narratives are incomplete but the information and pictures that are there should be an incentive to grow more. Questions? Give us a call at 802-426-3505 or email at lilies@ hughes.net Sharing information is what good gardeners do!
6 comments:
Just when I thought my hosta obsession was over, you go and post beautiful photos of them :).
I just hope critters don't get mine over the winter. I think I have already discovered some damage to some potted hostas under my deck - I'm thinking squirrels have been poking around in them.
Squirrels may have been digging but if you lived up here you would know it to be voles. Have to say that over the years the chipmunks did a great job "planting" lily scales for us and as a result we are now finding some old ones that we thought were long since lost.
Two years ago we found some of the Original Enchantment lilium that we bought from Oregon Bulb Farm. Not so much that it is a beauty because it isn't but it has a heritage that's important. Good luck with the critters!
George, The Vermont gardener
What a snowshoe? That anything like soft shoe where you do the tip tip tapping with your toes?
I forget to aks you. Is you from Africa because my people from there ... originally.
Hi Rondell;
Try this on the snowshoes: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowshoe
I use Green Mountain Trapper and bear paws.
RE: Name: Said to have origins with Dutch. Several people shared geneologies years ago and spelling differed and ancestors represented all walks of life, all races, and from good to bad people. Traded in spices, diamonds, cloth goods, people,--the continuum, depending on which way the ships went. I'll check out your blog. Thanks for finding me!
George, I so enjoy catching up and reading all your creative posts but always a *sigh* when I see hostas, bones in my garden. Good idea to show customers mature plants ... Enjoy your snowshoes and the remains of winter :)
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