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| I want a large (multi-eyed) Victory. I got one last fall, but it was a single eye. LOTG has it. Are their plants really larger than you would get from a less expensive supplier?
bkay |
Follow-Up Postings:
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| Victory being a patented plant that you can't propagate by division should be being offered by a number of suppliers as larger plants. I believe Q and Z is the producer. I saw some larger plants being sold on the Hosta Library Auction last summer.I am sure that LOG will tell you what you are paying for. Rob |
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- Posted by steve_mass 5b (My Page) on Tue, Mar 6, 12 at 20:21
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| If you want a mature division give Jim at Jim's hostas a call. He generally sells one or two eyed mature divisions and maybe able to work a deal for you if you want an even larger size. Scott |
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- Posted by moccasinlanding z9A AL (My Page) on Tue, Mar 6, 12 at 21:58
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- Posted by steve_mass 5b (My Page) on Wed, Mar 7, 12 at 6:06
| Yes, those are two eyes sticking up. Unfortunately, the soilless mix has receded showing the roots. You should add more mix to that pot to cover those roots. Steve |
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- Posted by ken_adrian z5 (My Page) on Wed, Mar 7, 12 at 8:23
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Here is what I got in 2010 from Land of the Giants Hosta Farm. It seems you will not get multi-eye, but divisions from mature plants : Bernd |
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| Hornbaker Gardens do sell hosta by the clump through the mail from $25.00-$60.00 with $12.00 shipping for instant gratification from 3 to 5 year old clumps but they didn't have Victory by the clump. The biggest they list are Sagae and S&S for $50.00. They have their regular potted Victory for $18.00. Their clump price list: My $4.75 Victory will be a 3 year old TC this year. It's still a baby and looks silly planted with nothing even close to it. I left a 3' radius around it so it has room to grow. |
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| Mine hasn't broken ground yet, so I'm going to assume it will be single eyed again. It didn't have time to grow any last fall. Maybe I should get two more and add to the pot I already have. I've done the three to a pot several times, and it makes a nice pot a lot sooner. (The photo probably is of three Victory, as they plant three of everything.) Moccasin, Victory was beautiful in August last year at the Dallas Arboretum. I don't know how old it is, but after a blazing hot summer, it didn't have a single burned leaf. I'm hoping it will do as well for me in a pot. (The leaf damange is from 2 hailstorms. Since we had no rain either, the crape myrtle blossoms just sat there on the leaves.) bkay |
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- Posted by ken_adrian z5 (My Page) on Wed, Mar 7, 12 at 12:45
| what you are hoping to get with a large plant.. is a pre-grown large root system ... with the giants ... its all about growing the roots to support the giant ... the first pic of a LOTG plant way above.. is going to shrink ... but the second set of pic from LOTG .... shows a monster root mass.. compared to what we think of TC ... the money you pay is for that root mass ... there is still a great potential for them to shrink for a year .. but you know there is a big root mass that will explode the second year ... any crown division.. will set the plant back.. take that as etched in granite ... the best example i can come up with is Gisela ... who appears to have a local source of giant potted material.. that goes in the ground.. and never looks back.. instant gratification.. and worth the higher cost.. but there arent many of us who have that kind of source .... but i just dont see how there can be a mail order equivalent... and i have no experience with hornbakers as noted above.. that might be your best shot.. and call them.. a seller needs to have a certain inventory to list in a catalog ... say 10 or 20 .... but that does NOT mean they may not have 2 or 3 laying around.. that they would be able to sell.. so when searching for something.. ONLY a call will help ... [i still think email is too impersonal ... ] ken |
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| Sorry, the Elvis Lives plant I got from LOTG actually had several eyes, as also shown in above picture. The other plant is not Victory, but Olive Baily Langdon. I bought two OBL and planted them together. This is how two divisions of a mature plant look after one year : |
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| It is very common for a retailer to offer larger divisions of plants that have been on the market for years. Ken is right that most mail order companies do not like to ship ( and most customers are not willing to pay for) extra large divisions of giant plants. I bought a couple of H. Victory about 4 years ago. It may be the location or just the natural growing rate for my conditions but they are slow growing for me. They are getting big but not putting on many new eyes. I am hoping for the leap and maybe have one the looks like Kens. |
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| So, the three smaller ones will work just fine. Made in the Shade has it as does White Oak. I'm waiting for Chris to return my email, in case he has some. I think Victory likes the heat. I keep saying how good it looked last year at the Arboretum, but I'm not overstating it. It may have been the best looking hosta there in August. The Sun hosta wasn't burned either. All others were burned to some extent and some were totally melted, even plantaginea offspring. By August of last year, I was melted, too, come to think of it. It's the worst summer we've had since 1980. Yet Victory was unfazed by the heat. Now, we'll see how it does in a pot. bkay |
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- Posted by moccasinlanding z9A AL (My Page) on Sun, Mar 11, 12 at 22:19
| I had to go back and reconstruct my invoices to see exactly where my plants came from, and why I got two of some. Those plants which came in multiples were from Hostahosta, Solbergs place. They were offering some at end of season as "twofers." And that is how I ended up with TWO 'Beet Salads' It is good to know that Victory can take the heat such as you had in the Texas drought last year. We had a sort of drought, but not as deep and enduring as Texas had, or even other parts of the southeast. It is a good thing we installed a municipal irrigation meter last year, because sewer fees are twice the cost of water here. We have good drinking water, but it sure smells like chlorine bleach. I am also setting up two 60 gallon cisterns to collect rain water for watering container plants. Speaking of large hosta, I am holding my breath to see what S&S does. It has one eye up, now about 4 inches tall, to go with that MASSIVE root system which held onto the soil when I dug it out of the Massachusetts garden last October. It filled up a 5 gallon bucket after being in the ground one year. I turned the bucket on its side to keep rain from getting into it, so it did not rot any that I can tell. I suppose ignorance is bliss, because I did not know that having them rained on during the winter could cause crown rot. But now that I DO KNOW, I am no longer immune due to ignorance. Since I repotted S&S this last week, I've sunk an umbrella in the pot with it to keep the rain out as much as possible. We'll see what happens next. |
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| Only people like us will have umbrellas, sheets, boxes, and shade clothes in their yards to protect their hosta! |
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| An UMBRELLA????? LMAO Hey, I'm a believer, do whatever it takes. -Babka |
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| I don't cover mine in the winter. The only time I've lost any is when I bought that Miracle Grow Moisture Control potting soil. Of course, I have more winter than Babka, which may be a factor, too. bkay |
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| Frank, it is always good to have several shade cloths (burlap, spun row cover, landscape fabric) on two sticks each in the garage. I use it to shade new dwarf conifers individually, helps a lot! Bernd |
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