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  • 비비추 '패트리엇'-[정명] Hosta 'Patriot'
    식물/들꽃-백합과(Liliaceae) 2024. 4. 14. 17:59
    과명 Liliaceae (백합과) 속명 Hosta (비비추속)
    전체학명 [정명] Hosta 'Patriot' 추천명 비비추 '패트리엇'
           
    Common Name: hosta 
    Type: Herbaceous perennial
    Family: Asparagaceae
    Zone: 3 to 8
    Height: 1.00 to 1.50 feet
    Spread: 2.00 to 2.50 feet
    Bloom Time: July to August
    Bloom Description: Lavender
    Sun: Part shade to full shade
    Water: Medium
    Maintenance: Low
    Flower: Showy
    Leaf: Colorful
    Attracts: Hummingbirds
    Tolerate: Heavy Shade, Black Walnut

    Culture

    Easily grown in evenly moist, organically rich, well-drained soils in part shade to full shade. Best in part shade (some morning sun or sun dappled conditions). Established plants have some tolerance for dry shade (particularly plants with thick leaves), but soils should never be allowed to dry out. Full size and quality form are best achieved with consistent moisture. Water is best applied directly to the soil beneath the leaves. Divide plants as needed in spring or autumn. Division is usually easiest in early spring before the leaves unfurl. Plant in locations protected from wind. Hostas are generally considered to be low-maintenance perennials.

    Noteworthy Characteristics

    Hosta is a genus of about 70 species of shade-loving, rhizomatous, clump-forming, herbaceous perennials which are native to open woodlands, woodland margins and glades in Japan, Korea, China and eastern Russia. Hostas are primarily grown for their ornamental foliage. Stalked, conspicuously-veined, often dense, basal leaves in a variety of shapes, sizes, colors and textures rise up from a central rhizomatous crown to form a rounded to spreading mound of foliage. Bell or funnel-shaped flowers in terminal, mostly one-sided racemes bloom in late spring or summer atop vertical, unbranched, usually leafless but frequently bracted scapes which rise upward from the crown or rootstock to a point often well above the foliage mound.

    Genus name honors Austrian botanist Nicholas Thomas Host (1761-1834) and was first established in 1812. The genus was subsequently renamed in 1817 as Funkia in honor of botanist Heinrich Christian Funk under the belief at that time that Hosta was an invalid name. Hosta was finally reinstated as the genus name in 1905 by the International Botanical Congress.

    Funkia remains a popular common name today in some areas. An additional common name for plants in this genus is plantain lily (foliage is somewhat plantain-like and flowers are somewhat lily-like in some species).

    'Patriot' is a hosta cultivar that features a 12-20" tall mound of large, variegated, oval, basal leaves (to 7" long) which have deep green centers and wide irregular white margins. A sport of the long popular H. 'Francee'. Foliage mound will typically spread to 24-30" wide. Racemes of bell-shaped, lavender flowers appear in summer on scapes rising well above the foliage mound to 34" tall. J. Machen 1992.

    Hosta 'Patriot' - Plant Finder (missouribotanicalgarden.org)

     

     

     

    https://youtu.be/paLWgE-Po-I?t=591

     

     

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