Probably the most difficult questions we get are the ones requesting help
deciding which plants to buy.
I have no expertise in garden
design, and even if I did, I don't see how anyone could provide a design or
suggest a plant list for an area they haven't seen and know little or
nothing about. I realize there are people who will do it, I just don't
know how. So I can't tell you what hosta goes where, or looks good
next to whatever. All I can do is tell you the ones I personally like,
and at the same time warn you that I really don't know why anyone would
care.
The
differences between most of the 300 or so hostas in our catalog can be boiled down to three essentials;
how large they'll get, what
they cost, and what they look like. To decide which hostas are best for you, you
simply have to eliminate all of them that are too large, too small, and too
expensive, and from what's left, you pick which ones you like best. It's
the same decision you make every time you shop for clothes, cars or any number
of things you buy. Except with hostas it's very hard to make a
mistake. We don't sell ugly hostas. Even when we occasionally list a
plant that may not be a good choice for the average gardener for some reason,
we'll tell you so. It really doesn't matter which ones I like, they're not
going in my garden.
Obviously,
this is not the answer people are looking for, so I've