Chet
Tompkins of Oregon
registered this cultivar in 1984 as a cross of two unnamed
seedlings but thought to have
H. montana
in the background.
This large size plant has heavily corrugated foliage and near white
flowers from mid-July into August. It has pie crusted shaped
green foliage that develop a yellow "splotched" pattern later in
the summer.
According to
The Hosta Handbook by Mark Zilis (2000), "The unusually splotched foliage makes it either one
of the most beautiful hostas ever developed or something that
induces itching. This characteristic is not caused by a
virus, but is a genetic trait that can be passed on to seedlings."
The New Encyclopedia of Hostas by
Diana
Grenfell (2009) states: "Increases rapidly...The variegation, which is
random and unstable, fades during the summer."
"Plant
has unstable variegation and all-green leaves often appear. No
two leaves alike, variegation whitish green on bluish green,
blotches, patches, streaks, very irregular."
This
was named for Chet's mother,
Cynthia, who was one of the early pioneers in the
world of hostas in the U.S. |