This cultivar with
H.
sieboldii in its background was originated by
David
Stone of Connecticut but was registered by
Peter Ruh of Ohio in
1988. It forms a small size mound of gold foliage with white marginal
variegation.
The plant grows about 9 inches in height with a
spread of around 25 inches. Its leaves are slightly wavy with
smooth texture and thin substance. Medium purple flowers bloom
in August.
According to
The Hostapedia by Mark Zilis (2009), "...becoming hard to find."
An article titled
The Hosta Legacy of the Late David Stone appeared in the 1985 issue of
what was then called
The American Hosta
Society Bulletin. The article was authored by Stone's former partners in the
Piedmont Gardens nursery in Waterbury, Connecticut,
F. Henry Payne
and Philip R. Payne.
"We also selected a yellow-leafed white-margined miniature and called it H.
'Little Ann'. Many visitors have suggested
that it resembles the well-known H. 'Anne
Arett' but 'Little Ann' blooms at a different time and differs in hue. Its
blossom is eight inches tall, with lavender flowers. Unfortunately it is slow to
increase. It is very, very popular."
In
The
Hosta Journal (1992 Vol. 23 No. 1) there is an article by Peter Ruh about the so-called David Stone Medium or Miniature hostas which went by a numbering system that started with
DSM. This
cultivar was called DSM #4 and was described as "Small, fragile plant,
yellow leaves with cream border, lavender flowers. Named by
Payne."
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