Choose well, and hosta can stand the heat
While seeking out shade in the heat of early June, my mind goes to hostas and their shade-loving companions. I grow a few hostas in my garden and love the texture and color they add, especially in combination with perennials like variegated Solomon's Seal, Polygonatum odoratum 'Variegatum'; Japanese painted fern, Athyrium niponicum 'Pictum'; and hellebores. Bill Hudgins, owner of the Buckhead garden shop Lush Life, is known for his extensive collection of Japanese maples and the way he deftly incorporates them into his garden. Beyond maples, though, he has stunning combinations for shade, including hostas. A favorite is the large-leaf Hosta 'Blue Angel' paired with a wonderful green and gold variegated grass, Hakonechloa macra 'Aureola.' He admits, though, that the blue-leaved forms tend to fade in the intense heat. Other winners for him include H. 'Gold Standard' with gold leaves edged in green and H. 'June.' For companions, he uses ferns and epimedium as well as boxwood. He also grows hostas in pots including H. 'Sum and Substance' ( I love the huge chartreuse leaves) and H. 'Francee.' When I caught up with Jack Driskell, a horticultural technician for the new Smith-Gilbert Arboretum in Kennesaw, he talked about hostas that have done well for him despite heat and dry weather. These include H. 'Sague' (leaves are a dark blue-green center and a cream edge), H. 'So Sweet' (shiny green with a cream edge and growing in a pot) and H. 'Spritzer' (gold when they first emerge).