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Sun...dappled shade...sun...dappled shade...sun

19 years ago

Hi all,

My goodness, I've been away from this forum much too long. It will take me hours catching up on all the great advice you all are sharing. I am planning (on graph paper) a new garden area that will receive full sun, followed by dappled shade from Silver Maple trees, followed by full noon sun, again followed by dappled shade, and finally full late afternoon sun. In this garden area I already have Hostas, 'June', 'August Moon', and 'Gold Drop'. They all do fine in this crazy light situation. I'm looking for more Hostas that can tolerate these light changes, and also have good slug resistance.

Thanks in advance for your ideas,

Julie

Comments (12)

  • 19 years ago

    Hmmm, Sum and Substance comes to mind, as well as Plantaginea, Inniswood, Guacamole, Regal Splendor,
    Francee, Sum of All, to name some that do well in my yard with some of both the conditions you describe.

    I think it depends on how long they would be in full sun!

    All the ones I've mentioned can handle the sun!

    Welcome back, "luvto"--hope to see you posting more!

    Janice

  • 19 years ago

    probably all of them ..... in WI ...

    the blues might not appreciate the sun in the heat of the day ..... and ones with big white centers may melt out in TOO much sun .. but need more sun because of the reduced amount of chlorophyll .... real catch 22 there ....

    regardless... the more sun ... the faster they grow .. and the faster they mature .... the further south you go .. the more problematic afternoon sun becomes ....

    bottom line... PLANT WHATEVER HOSTA YOU WANT .... and if it doesn't thrive ... to your satisfaction ... MOVE IT ....

    hosta actually do grow on driveways ... so your little patch of heaven .. shouldn't really be that much of a problem ....

    when it comes to hosta.. JUST DO IT .... worry about it later .... heck .. with hosta.. you dont even need to worry about it ....

    good luck

    ken

  • 19 years ago

    I love Ken's advice on Hostas. Just do it! :) It's when I start trying to analyze what I'm doing that I end up in trouble! (And also, when I have 50 or 60 hosta waiting to be planted and it's mid-September, but that's another problem.)

    Diann

  • 19 years ago

    O.K. Thanks all you zone 5-ers. Yes, that is the wonderful thing about gardening - moving plants to more desirable spots when a present location is not working.
    My husband and a neighbor felled a giant dead oak tree in our back yard late last summer. I had several varieties of Hostas growing under it, and once it was gone, they were receiving instant half day sun. I panicked and quickly moved most of them to shadier locations. Now, using hindsight (always 20-20), I probably should have left them to see which would adapt.

    Janice, I will try to visit more often.

    Julie

  • 19 years ago

    From another temp absentee...
    You have described not only my own back yard,fraught with hosta and trees but a perfact area to grow Hosta in case you weren't thinking of it,(smile). Choose from all the lovlies and then water. They will all excel.

  • 19 years ago

    ".... the further south you go .. the more problematic afternoon sun becomes ...."

    I have simular light conditions in the 2 areas I'd like to plant mine (seeds recieved in trade). I imagine WI summers are cooler than Eastern WA summers, but does that mean the sun's intensity is equal because we are northern states? Plus here we lack summer humidity in temps that exceed 90+ for weeks.

    Thanks,

    Vera

  • 19 years ago

    Hi Vera,
    I was born in Puyallup, WA. I'm sure you know where that is, but we moved to WI when I was a year old. I've been back there to visit a few times, but mostly to visit relatives in Tacoma. As I can recall, Eastern WA is much different than Western WA......Eastern WA much flatter? Anyway, about the weather here - you can expect anything and everything. Our summers can be extremely hot, in the 90's,or 100's, dry or humid, droughts and flooding, long cool rainy Springs that never seem to end, or so short we seem to go from Winter to summer. (Same for Fall) No matter what the weather is, the Hostas survive. And as Ken mentioned above, plant whatever you want, and if it doesn't do well, move it.
    Have fun experimenting. I know I will.

    Julie

  • 19 years ago

    hi julie..

    whereabouts do you live??....how many hostas do you have??

    do you want a visitor???,,,lol,,,,AND,,,of course,,,you are welcome to come here....

    jill (1/2 hour south of green bay)

  • 18 years ago

    Water is more important to worry about than sun

  • 18 years ago

    I agree about the importance of water, especially to get Hostas established. I have to water when it's cloudy, or early in the morning, but not while the sun is shining intensely at high noon. (Water droplets act like little prisms and can burn holes in the leaves).

    Hi Jill, as you know I replied to your post over in the WI forum.
    Looking forward to Spring,
    Julie

  • 18 years ago

    Jill/Julie...
    There's a WI (Wisconsin?) forum? Tell me more!

  • 18 years ago

    Hi, hosta-haven,
    You must be burried in snow by now!

    Here is a link that might be useful: Wisconsin gardening