This
is a selection of H. 'Opipara' which came from
Japan and was
registered by
Bill Brincka himself in 1988. It grows to
large size at a height
of 2 feet with a spread of 5 feet. In August, it bears medium
purple colored flowers on scapes that may grow to 4 feet
followed by viable seeds.
The New Encyclopedia of Hostas by
Diana
Grenfell (2009) states: "Not suitable for container growing...A virus-free
clone...registered to distinguish it from its parent
which was originally thought to be virus-prone."
There seems
to be a lot of confusion over this fine hosta as
evidenced by the following comments from Mark Zilis.
It appears that he is saying that H. 'Opipara' is
actually H. 'Bill Brincka' but it could also be H. 'Koriyama' which could be H. 'Opipara Koriyama'
which is the same as H. 'Mishima Fukurin Koba'...is
that clear?
RE: H. 'Opipara' -
Mark Zilis (2009) says,
"...'Opipara' (or 'Bill Brincka') should be in every hosta
collection...In the 1980s, however, I would not have given this
plant such a glowing recommendation. Nearly every plant of 'Opipara'...in
the United States was infected with a virus (probably
Hosta Virus X). Fortunately,
Bill Brincka... obtained
a clean selection of this plant, which was marketed under his
name..."
RE: H. 'Koryama' - According to
The Hostapedia by Mark Zilis (2009), "When I first encountered this
plant in the 1980s, it was purported to be a dwarf-size
Hosta opipara, listed as
Hosta opipara 'Koriyama'. A
lot has changed since that time. Hosta opipara is now considered
a cultivar (H. 'Opipara') and 'Koriyama' is the proper spelling
for the plant (named for a mountain in northeastern Japan). More
importantly, 'Koriyama' appears to be the same as 'Mishima
Fukurin Koba', a form of Hosta sieboldii!"
RE: H. 'Bill Brincka'
- Mark Zilis (2009) states,
"...represents a
virus -free
version of 'Opipara'. Most 'Opipara' specimens in the U.S. were
infected with a virus (probably
Hosta Virus X) before
Bill Brincka imported this clean plant from
Japan. By whatever name,
the plant is simply magnificent."
Mikiko Lockwood in an article on The Hosta Library titled,
A Little About Japanese Hosta Terms defines the term koba as small leaf,
'Koba Gibōshi' or
H. sieboldii and the term fukurin as margined or edged.
An Editor's note in
The
Hosta Journal (2010 Vol. 41 No. 1) states that, "H. 'Bill Brincka' is a selection of 'Opipara', but without the virus that plagues
many 'Opipara' plants. When Bill Brincka brought his fabulous leaves of the
plant he called 'Bill Brincka' to the
National Convention of
The American Hosta Society Hosta Show in Jackson,
Michigan, in 1988, it had been feared that all 'Opipara' plants were
virus-infected, but his clearly was not."
A Photo Essay article by Steve Chamberlain in
The
Hostta Journal (2010 Vol. 41 No. 1) makes comments about
H. 'Bill Brincka', "
William Brincka registered this selected clone of 'Opipara'
in 1988. Although it has leaves of a size appropriate for a medium-sized hosta,
it is strongly stoloniferous (Mr PGC - Hostas are rhizomatous) and forms
a very large plant as it matures. The shiny green leaves emerge with a bright
yellow margin that slowly lightens to white as the season progresses..."
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"A large,
highly variegated, shiny-leafed,
stoloniferous, healthy, non-virused
plant. It has a wide yellow margin that
becomes white in strong light and it
runs all the way down the petiole. This
is a highly visible and dramatically
handsome plant."
The
should read rhizomatous rather than
stoloniferous. |
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