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							  Walters Gardens, 
			Inc. of Michigan and
				Clarence (C.H.) Falstad, III  of Michigan registered this cultivar in 1993 which is noted for 
				its extra double flowers. It is a sport of H. plantaginea 
				'Aphrodite' which 
				accounts for the fragrance of the blooms which appear in August. 
An article about H. 'Yu Lei' by Warren I. Pollock in 
			The 
				Hosta Journal (1998 Vol. 29 No. 1) states that "This is 
a British introduction from Notcutts Nurseries...It was brought to the U.K. from 
China...The name means "White Fairy."...has a multiplicity of flowers with 
different number of flower petals (tepals) ranging from double flowered to 
double-double flowered (24 petals). The latter already has a name, H. 'Venus'." 
 An article about favorite flowering hostas by 
C.H. Falstad in 
			The 
				Hosta Journal (2006 Vol. 37 No. 2) says, "Picking one 
hosta flower is like settling for one flavor of Ice 
Cream the rest of your 
life...H. 'Venus' - how can you beat a huge, pure white, deliciously fragrant 
flower...'Austin Dickinson': Wow! Large, fragrant, with dark purple stripe son 
white background in the inside and purple and white perpendicular bands on the 
outside, upright scapes with flowers held out at 90 degrees...'Hirao Majesty', 
solid medium purple with deep purple anthers...Large flowers with pointed petals 
(tepals)...Many people call 'Hirao Majesty' the bird-of-paradise of hostas, and 
the unopened scape and bracts resemble that plant quite well." 
						
						 W. George Schmid  
continued in the same piece, "The best 
flowers are on H. plantaginea  and its multi-petalous cousins, 'Venus' 
and  
'Aphrodite'...H. capitata in bud is fine, but its offspring, 'Nakaimo' has 
flowers that begin with the shine of precious porcelain and stay closed in bud 
longer...H. kikutii  forms all have fine and late flowers, but the best are on 
H. kikutii var. densa (H. densa). They are white and form a tight bunch at the top 
of the scape. H. laevigata  has large, spidery flowers in abundance; its cousin 
H. yingeri  has smaller ones with the same spidery character and dark color. 
These spidery flowers are carried all around the stem unlike other hosta flowers 
that, "lean to one side...Finally, mature clumps of 'Blue Angel'  and 'Elegans'  
have a beautiful flower display when many flowers on different scapes open in 
unison..." 
						  
						
			  
						
			  
			
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