Monday, April 29, 2013

Divide and Conquer

It's been a while, but I have updates! The weather is finally a little warmer, so I've spent a couple days outside.

The first project I tackled was dividing hostas. Back when we moved in about 13 years ago I bought some hostas and planted them with some bleeding hearts along the north side of the house. Hostas are one of the few plants that thrive in shade, and I remembered my parents having bleeding hearts on the shady side of our house growing up (Plus I *love* bleeding hearts. Who can resist those heart shaped flowers?!) Unfortunately I underestimated how many plants we needed and only got about a 2/3rds of the way to the back of the house.

See where the dirt ends?

The little bushy plant  in the above pic is a bleeding heart. I had another one, but I it was taken over by the hostas and died a couple years ago. Even though you can't see them in the picture, there *are* several big hostas there, just starting to poke up out of the soil, like so:



For the last couple years I've been looking unsuccessfully for the same variety of hosta to complete the border. When their foliage fills out they have solid green leaves and purple flowers, like this:


It finally dawned on me that I *thought* I remembered seeing somewhere that you can divide the hosta roots to create several smaller plants that will eventually grow into more huge plants.

And thanks to a tutorial on youtube, I was able to do just that. As it turns out this is the perfect time of year to divide them - when their spikes are just starting to emerge.

It's an easy process.

1) Pick a hosta and dig it out of the ground, being careful not to destroy the root system too much. From what I've read even if you do majorly chop the roots it's no big deal. Hostas can apparently survive almost anything.

Digging...

Digging...


Dug. And upside down.



2) After digging them up, they say you should hose them off and get rid as much of the soil between the roots as possible. Not sure the purpose of this, but I did it anyway.


Top of hosta after a partial hosing. Look at all those roots!

3) Chop the plant into smaller pieces using a big ol' garden shovel. Then hose down the smaller pieces again for good measure before planting. I cut the above plant into three chunks.


The cool thing about Hostas, is as long as you have at least one shoot attached to a clump of roots, you can plant it and it will make a new (although very mini ) hosta.

Mini hosta! Too tiny for my border, but pretty adorable.
4)  Dig holes for your new chopped hostas, add compost, and plant.


The chalk drawing on the left was done by my seven year old, Sam.





Voila!

I added another bleeding heart from my local nursery too.

OK, it's not very impressive right now, but it should look pretty awesome by mid-summer. I think I also want to add a border of medium sized rocks around these plants. we have *very* rocky soil here, so I definitely have a lot of them.

Next up, veggie garden update and pea planting!

2 comments:

  1. I can attest that hosta can survive anything. The one I rescued from M's school parking lot last summer (sitting on a plastic bag in the hot sun with no water and soil for weeks) just came up from where I replanted it. Looking stripey and awesome. I have way too many plain green hostas, btw... let me know if you want more!

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  2. I need to take an updated pic of the divided hostas they're getting leafy and looking happy. Hostas rock. :)

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