Slug-resistant Hostas

Started by Georgie, October 15, 2008, 16:31:13

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Robert_Brenchley

Leave the crown at ground level; the stems will rot down soon enough. Put it somewhere shady; in the hot summer a couple of years ago, I found that hostas sailed through anywhere shady, but any in full sun were killed off.

Robert_Brenchley


Georgie

'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

ceres


Hosta

You just reminded me that  I hadnt sent away for the same Free 3 hostas from GW magazine. Been on and done it now, but they are not being sent out till February.

Good luck with them !   :)

Georgie

Oooo, we'll be able to compare notes, Ceres and Hosta.   :)

G x
'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

Garden Manager

We bought a hosta called 'June' from the Garden House last year that was sold as slug resistant. And last summer it wasn't touched despite the mollusc plague. This year not quite so good as it did get a bit nibbled but nowhere near as much as my other hostas.

'June' is a smaller type of slug resistant hosta (unlike some of the others mentioned that tend to be big plants). it has an attractive yellow and blue-green variegation and quite large and significant purple flowers.

Hope this helps

Georgie

I thought it was time to post an update.  The three 'slug resistant' Hostas I planted out back in the autumn are all showing signs of growing but one, 'Invincible', has had its leading main unfurled leaf almost completely eaten through. Not very well named is it? So far so good with the other two.  How are yours doing?

G x
'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

Hosta

All three of mine are through aswell, Big Daddy was the last to show his face.

They are all doing well, no sign of anything nibbling them  :)  -  Yet !!





zigzig

Slugs eat hostas because they are a delicious leaf.

If you think that they are not edible you deserve to loose them to the slugs and snails.

The leaves are eaten whole, bites taken as you enjoy the rest of the meal.


Georgie

#29
Quote from: zigzig on March 29, 2009, 18:11:51
Slugs eat hostas because they are a delicious leaf.

If you think that they are not edible you deserve to loose them to the slugs and snails.

The leaves are eaten whole, bites taken as you enjoy the rest of the meal.



How rude.   >:(

Anyway, for those of us who are following this trial I've taken pictures of mine today.  Here they are:



Tokudama - the slow coach



(not so) Invincible



Big Daddy

G x

'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

PurpleHeather

Quote from: Georgie on April 12, 2009, 16:42:16
Quote from: zigzig on March 29, 2009, 18:11:51
Slugs eat hostas because they are a delicious leaf.

If you think that they are not edible you deserve to loose them to the slugs and snails.

The leaves are eaten whole, bites taken as you enjoy the rest of the meal.



How rude.   >:(

Anyway, for those of us who are following this trial I've taken pictures of mine today.  Here they are:



Tokudama - the slow coach



(not so) Invincible



Big Daddy

G x



How sanctimonious

betula

Very good thread Georgie ;D

ceres

You've reminded me to go and have a look for mine.  I can't remember where I put them!  Can you tell I don't 'do' non-edibles  ;)

They're looking good Georgie, even Invincible hasn't been stripped bare so there's hope yet......

Georgie

Quote from: ceres on April 15, 2009, 10:45:16
You've reminded me to go and have a look for mine.  I can't remember where I put them!  Can you tell I don't 'do' non-edibles  ;)

They're looking good Georgie, even Invincible hasn't been stripped bare so there's hope yet......

LOL Ceres!  They seem very slow to me but as I've never grown them before I don't know if that's normal. 

I hope you find yours and also that others who took advantage of the offer report back on how theirs are doing soon.

G x
'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

Hosta

Quote from: zigzig on March 29, 2009, 18:11:51
Slugs eat hostas because they are a delicious leaf.

If you think that they are not edible you deserve to loose them to the slugs and snails.

The leaves are eaten whole, bites taken as you enjoy the rest of the meal.



Aww zigzig, of course we all know that slugs love to eat Hostas - and we dont think for a minute they are not edible and we certainly dont 'deserve' to lose them due to ignorance of that fact !! 

What we are doing here is testing out the claim that these Hostas are supposed to be slug-resistant.

Georgie, mine are doing fine so far and look about similar size to yours  :)



Robert_Brenchley

They not only taste nice to the slug, they keep the same leaves all season. So once something's had a nibble, the nibble just stays there, while so many plants grow new leaves, and it disappears after a while. I still haven't replaced the ones I lost in the drought three years ago, so I'm watching this thread with interest!

FennelandFern

I've always found that boiling up two big bulbs of garlic (peeled first) and spraying liberally over the plants, then surrounding the hosta with a mulch of coffee grounds sends the slugs running....

www.fennelandfern.co.uk
www.fennelandfern.co.uk

Have a look at the Good Growing Guide - free downloadable gardening advice: www.fennelandfern.co.uk/grow

Robert_Brenchley

I like the blog, but you could save yourself a bit of bother by putting the URL in your signature.

littlebabybird

Big Daddy is growing for me 2 leaves one with nibbles but no sign of the other 2
lbb

Georgie

Quote from: FennelandFern on April 16, 2009, 11:29:08
I've always found that boiling up two big bulbs of garlic (peeled first) and spraying liberally over the plants, then surrounding the hosta with a mulch of coffee grounds sends the slugs running....

www.fennelandfern.co.uk

That's interesting.  I've used a garlic spray on aphid infestations before but hadn't heard of it as a slug deterrant.  I've never found coffee grounds effective, sadly.

Quote from: littlebabybird on April 16, 2009, 19:42:53
Big Daddy is growing for me 2 leaves one with nibbles but no sign of the other 2
lbb

Oh dear, LBB, that doesn't sound good.   :(

G x 
'The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts.'

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