How to propagate large numbers of hostas in a nursery// Divide plantain lillies // Hosta Production

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2025

Комментарии • 472

  • @savvydirtfarmer
    @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +43

    Happy Growing, everyone!

  • @blubbietweeduizend
    @blubbietweeduizend 2 года назад +44

    This morning I watched your video and this afternoon I thinned out and divided a small but quite dense field of Hosta's. The open spaces are barely noticeable but now I have 35 more Hosta's in my garden.. Thanks.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +4

      Well done!!

    • @Nunya2025
      @Nunya2025 Год назад +1

      @@savvydirtfarmer exciting! hows it going now

    • @gregboshell977
      @gregboshell977 Год назад +5

      Couple of years ago I divided a hosta and ended up with 17 outa one plant

  • @artist.chantal
    @artist.chantal Год назад +4

    There's a reason why this video is the top suggested on Google👏👏

  • @ForgingFreedomTV
    @ForgingFreedomTV Год назад +5

    Excellent information! I’ve dabbled in plant propagation and have had good success! I always love learning something new. Our motto is “helping you to achieve your personal liberty” and learning how to propagate your own plants and create an extra income stream is definitely one of those skills we encourage. Thanks for all the work you put into your channel! I look forward to consuming all of it.

  • @ydnftbhdy
    @ydnftbhdy Год назад +2

    Just found large pots of hostas on sale for 26CAD and was going to divide them up, glad I found your video.

  • @joesabal1212
    @joesabal1212 Год назад +5

    Love this channel! I've got a ton of Hostas that need this type of transplant technique to feed my plant coffer with cash for other plants for my yard. Thank You

  • @peziki
    @peziki 2 года назад +19

    Very good production skills w/this video. Clear views, loud enough speaking, clear linguistic skills and good background scenes. Overall good demo and editing. Trying to keep backgrd noise down is good but keeping kids, pets, traffic quiet is not easy but helps.

  • @ybernier1925
    @ybernier1925 2 года назад +21

    i'm so happy i found your videos! my husband and I have been wanting t start a nursery for a while and this summer we're finally getting a start on it! were starting to divide our hostas and then daylilies.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      Good plan!

    • @marilynhudson5805
      @marilynhudson5805 2 года назад +3

      I hope you live near me. I will give you all the Hostas you want. I live in country club hills ILL. No charge s

    • @sandrakay26
      @sandrakay26 2 года назад +1

      @@marilynhudson5805 I live close to you!

  • @vo2651
    @vo2651 2 года назад +9

    Amazing training video, that's what it was for me 😊.
    I followed along and got 4 plants out of one! (4 Hosta plants where I live would have cost me $48). I searched RUclips for a tutorial on propagating them instead of spending all that $, and I'm so glad to have found yours! 😊
    Suggestion: You should pack this into a class and sell your informational videos, it will help you support your business, great teacher! (skillshare, udemy, & others)
    Thank you for sharing your knowledge with others and good luck! 👍 🙏

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      I wouldn;t even know where to start!

    • @turiaturiana7529
      @turiaturiana7529 2 года назад +1

      @@savvydirtfarmer get Chloe to look into it! I bet you she would be able to help.
      Agree with the poster, you have a wonderful teaching method and lovely attitude, you would definitely do well on skillshare and the like. It's just recorded videos like here, but payable 😊

  • @sandrearoth9846
    @sandrearoth9846 5 месяцев назад +1

    Nothing like a Hosta Takeover!! 🥬

  • @annapotter7397
    @annapotter7397 2 года назад +4

    The most informative video about separating hostas I've seen! Thank you!

  • @brittanyt3525
    @brittanyt3525 7 месяцев назад

    Such a beautiful video! I have learned so much from your channel. God has used you to influence so many women positively and you should feel very proud about that!! ❤❤❤

  • @fintryendrickwildlife1619
    @fintryendrickwildlife1619 2 года назад +10

    I divided many of my Hostas last year after watching your video , I used my least favourite in case it went pear shaped … that Hostas has now become a favourite … it is Wolverine and I split it last year into 20 plants and yesterday the last of the 20 have popped up for the spring … so many thanks for your terrific videos !!!
    sending you best wishes from Stirlingshire Scotland

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      Awesome! I have had Wolverine before but currently do not. Would love to find some more. Best of luck to you.

  • @lookingfordiscovery
    @lookingfordiscovery 6 месяцев назад

    I just dug mine out and cut into the mud with a careful eye, holta's started growing back within 8 days with a little tomorite and All Purpose feed along the way - quite incredible!

  • @carlagarzia7327
    @carlagarzia7327 3 года назад +1

    Love to hear you talk…..love love love southern folks.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +1

      It's part of our charm. 😀

    • @carlagarzia7327
      @carlagarzia7327 3 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer lol. You could be cursing me out and I’d still be smiling listening to you….”you dag gum not attractive little missy you, you ain’t got no green thumb and shouldn’t even be up in my dag gum garden.”

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +1

      @@carlagarzia7327 I may have to quote that sometime.. nicely done!

  • @WARRIOR.QUEEN.1
    @WARRIOR.QUEEN.1 Месяц назад

    LOL LIL BRO I HAD NO IDEA WHAT ""YOUR HOSTAS"" WERE SO I LOOKED THEM UP!!!!
    OMG WHILE IN FLORIDA I LOVED SEEING THOSE ENORMOUS """"RED 🐘 ELEPHANT EARS"""!!!!!! I THOUGHT THEY WERE ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS 😍
    I LEARNED CARDINAL CALADIUM WAS THEIR NAME!!!!!
    😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @paulortiz2035
    @paulortiz2035 2 года назад +3

    I tried to dig up a row of over grown hosts, once!
    What a F'ing lot of work that was! Incredible roots, incredibly thick, tough, and NOT EASY TO DIVIDE!
    Once I FINALLY got them out of the ground I put small sections of them on a sheet of plywood which was sitting on saw horses!
    Then I rather unceremoniously cut them into smaller plugs---- with a hand saw!!! Forget using a knife or scissors. The handsaw worked just fine! I cleaned up around the reduced plants soil line and replanted some of them again. The rest I tired to give away and threw out whatever was left.
    But they had to be divided as they had been in the ground 20-30 years, so they were a thick mat of roots and stems being choked by each other.
    The point is, a saw worked great. Even a bread knife was less then ineffectual!
    The hostas will look fairly sad for the rest of the summer after they are dug and divided but will recover nicely once spring arrives--- next year!
    They are some of the toughest plants I have ever worked with. Except for the white variegated ones which I was able to kill without any effort on my part. The white hosts can be very temperamental and are neither big nor fast growers, and die very, very easily!!! No idea why! But they are just NOT nearly as robust as green or blue or yellow ones!

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      There are probably 10 reasons why it's better to work with younger plants, and you just touched on several of them. You can divide a big, old hosta with a shovel, handsaw, axe, machete... whatever you have. For growing nursery plants? I prefer a more precise approach that doesn't require me to have an inventory of huge, mature plants to butcher every year.

  • @randyman8984
    @randyman8984 3 года назад +8

    I have 2 hostas that was getting drowned out by a bigger plant. They was still thriving you just couldnt see them from the front anymore so I dug them up this morning and did what you showed in this video. These came from the ground about 2 yrs old. Out of 2 plants I got about 18. 2 things I did diffennt was I put them in red solo cups(with holes) instead of the planters like you used. I want to say they are slightly bigger than what you used.. Also Instead of cutting them all the way down I removed about half of the foilage. Put them on the back porch that gets maybe 30 mins of 11: 30 am -noon sunshine.Just checked on them and they are looking good. I figured I might have alot of wilting since I left more foilage. I figured leaving more green on them they could phosenthis better and grow into mature plants faster.

  • @ORIGINALSECRETSCRATCHER
    @ORIGINALSECRETSCRATCHER Год назад

    What a great process and it looks like it does not take hardly any time at all....thanks for the information.

  • @evilpandagirl9
    @evilpandagirl9 Год назад

    Thank you for stating about nursery vs home difference! Thats what brought me here.

  • @ieeshamroczek6583
    @ieeshamroczek6583 3 года назад +4

    Thank u so much for this channel ive been thinking of starting my own home nursery and now i will. So excited

  • @jlkwoodartdesigns
    @jlkwoodartdesigns 2 года назад

    I am so lucky I came across ur videos I am a landscaper been thinking of starting a nursery business here in Houston TX I love plants I know the money that nurseries make selling plants around my area my back yard is big size I leave in a unrestricted neighborhood so excited to sell plants with ur knowledge on your videos I know u will teach me all I need on this nursery business thanks u so much

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      yes sir! Landscape + nursery is a great combination for a killer business plan... best of luck to you going forward with it.

    • @jlkwoodartdesigns
      @jlkwoodartdesigns 2 года назад

      Thanks again 🙌

    • @paulortiz2035
      @paulortiz2035 2 года назад

      You're joking right? This was written as a joke?

  • @imassage619
    @imassage619 2 года назад +1

    My favorite outdoor plant. Sad that Cali doesn’t have them. I have to buy them on line

    • @sunseabass
      @sunseabass 8 месяцев назад

      Don’t know where you are, but I just bought some at Home Depot today. Also they sell bare roots starting in January.
      I’m in SoCal.

  • @Plantmomofthesouth
    @Plantmomofthesouth 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for showing us this! I got some as a gift and they look like it needs to be separated and propagated so I can plant them where I need them to be.

  • @melvinosborne5691
    @melvinosborne5691 2 года назад

    man i really enjoyed this video, ive got a yard full hostas, love your channel your a keeper .

  • @denesestanley7011
    @denesestanley7011 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for this video. I love Hostas.

  • @greatsewing6061
    @greatsewing6061 2 года назад

    Excellent home grown presentation with a really lilting accent.

  • @batchrocketproject4720
    @batchrocketproject4720 Год назад +2

    Excellent demonstration, thanks for posting. Is there a way to encourage crowns to throw up more growth centres (like nicking or burying stem bases?). I'd like to establish some bigger clumps from small plants and would love to speed up the process.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад +1

      Not that I know of. Some varieties just don't multiply, and others multiply fast... too fast, really. The Night Before Christmas is an example... crazy how fast it multiplies!

  • @123marlo
    @123marlo 2 года назад

    Watching this from Scotland/UK and I grow Hostas but big one’s and give them to friends and family but after watching your video I think I will separate them when they’re smaller so throughly enjoyed your video so cheers from Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿👍👏👏🇺🇸

  • @kellybuchholz7361
    @kellybuchholz7361 2 года назад

    'Hosta murder' I laughed out loud....and subscribed. Vulcan hostas are so pretty!

  • @noramyshrall9700
    @noramyshrall9700 Год назад

    Thank you I found your RUclips tutorial very educational

  • @kuianderson965
    @kuianderson965 2 года назад

    Thank you for sharing, have a great time growing on from .New Zealand.

  • @noramyshrall9700
    @noramyshrall9700 Год назад

    Thank you I found your RUclips channel very educational

  • @lisahobock4114
    @lisahobock4114 2 года назад

    Great info. So glad I found your channel. Im also from west TN. I live in Alamo ( Crockett County)

  • @philipcrewe540
    @philipcrewe540 Год назад

    Great advice, I’ll give it ago, thank you from England

  • @dikdebruijn5101
    @dikdebruijn5101 Год назад

    I used your wonderful technique this summer to divide some hostas, which have now almost all lost their leaves down to soil level. What do I do with them through Fall and Winter? How often to water? They are in a greenhouse that usually stays around 40˚F over the winter. Thank you very much for the information.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад

      Don’t do anything with them. They need a cold. In order to survive. They have to go dormant. They can stand freezing, snow, cold, whatever, and winter and be fine.

  • @MartinaSchoppe
    @MartinaSchoppe 2 года назад

    it's even useful information for the "just gardener" not wanting to sell any propagated plants. But, when I buy plants I look for pots with plants that can be devided right away. Especially with plants that are a litle bit mor on the expensive side. Hellebors come to mind. There can be three or four of them in even very tiny pots (and hellebors are even easier to split then hostas). Of course they will be very very tiny the first year or two in the garden, but that is so worth the wait 😊

  • @saminemredjomoenawi5882
    @saminemredjomoenawi5882 Год назад

    WOW Wow Wow Wow!!!! 🙏❤️💕🎩🎵🎵🎵🎵🎵 THANK You so very much for Your Precious beautifully wisdomful Video dearest Sir. Humble greetings from Suriname
    God BLESS YOU FOREVER Sir 💗❤️💕

  • @vanferrell7021
    @vanferrell7021 2 года назад +1

    Not only is it a beautiful plant it's edible as well

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      What do they taste like and how do you cook them? Earlier in the season, maybe?

  • @fadihajjaj
    @fadihajjaj 3 года назад +8

    Interesting
    I have some hostas that rooted from only leaf and stem ( without actual root or crown). I took few leaves with stem and stuck them in ground and they kept growing !!

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +4

      YES!!! We tried it with just leaves, maybe 3 years ago and rooted about 50% of them. The problem with that is it takes painstakingly forever for them to grow out to a selling-sized plant. And, as with everything, I'm sure some hosta varieties work better than others.

    • @josieraimondi6763
      @josieraimondi6763 2 года назад +1

      Wonderful to know this.....when I was dividing several hostas, the stem broke off from the crown. I have them in water right now but I'll put some in potting mix and see how they grow. Glad I kept them!!!!

  • @DrCorvid
    @DrCorvid 2 года назад +1

    Youre a good teacher. Thank you.

  • @bunchib9768
    @bunchib9768 3 года назад

    Thank you this is great I live where winters are longer than summer Canada I hope I can do this as well as the summer winding down perfect time to catch sales

  • @SpeedyRichie
    @SpeedyRichie Год назад +1

    How often do you water them? Great video by the way!

  • @derondadozier1938
    @derondadozier1938 3 года назад

    Glad to k ow I can divide mine ...I didn't know that they could be divided

  • @rafael2661
    @rafael2661 7 месяцев назад

    Great video! Loved it!!!

  • @clmtdmmjcmm4489
    @clmtdmmjcmm4489 2 года назад

    All your videos are great! Thanks for the information

  • @andielliott7721
    @andielliott7721 9 месяцев назад

    I like your practical advice....

  • @andielliott7721
    @andielliott7721 10 месяцев назад

    I will be ordering from De Broomen...thanks for the tip.

  • @y0nd3r
    @y0nd3r Год назад

    13:04, is that regular landscape fabric on the ground? I looks like rubber and it gave me the idea to maybe use pond liner on top of my invasive Vinca Major to kill it.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад

      It’s called woven ground cover/cloth. “Woven” is important

  • @LiliansGardens
    @LiliansGardens 2 года назад

    Thanks , you deserve my sub and you got it. I want to perfect my hosta propagating skill and I gained from this video.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      Thank you! I'm just enjoying what we're learning in our backyard. We aren't experts at anything. Just sharing what has worked for us. thanks for watching!

  • @anapavcec622
    @anapavcec622 2 года назад

    love your videos, learning for my nursery. thank you :)

  • @fintryendrickwildlife1619
    @fintryendrickwildlife1619 3 года назад

    This is wonderful ... many thanks for this ... entertaining and interesting ... totally brilliant !!!

  • @John_GGG
    @John_GGG 3 года назад +4

    I had to dig up some hostas for a woman last week. I threw them in a leaf bag and brought them home.
    Today (I waited too long) I split them up into over a dozen plants and planted them with some ripped bags of soil I bought at big box store for $1 per bag last night.
    Thanks for the Savy tips!!

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +1

      I love those $1 ripped soil bags! I've picked a ton of them. Unless those hostas have been baking in the sun for a week, I imagine they will be fine. Give them time, leave them alone, and wait til Spring.

    • @paulortiz2035
      @paulortiz2035 2 года назад

      So how did they turn out? Thanks

    • @Nunya2025
      @Nunya2025 Год назад

      hows it going with them?

  • @orlandolang6753
    @orlandolang6753 3 года назад +8

    thank you for the video! I plan on doing that with my plants. Quick question, what do you do with them for the winter in places where the ground freezes. Just leave them in their containers until the following spring? Thank you in advance

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +6

      They stay in their containers on top of the ground, mostly uncovered, all winter.

    • @charliemagoo7943
      @charliemagoo7943 3 года назад +5

      I had some above ground in container when the Texas freeze came. Outside temp was below -15 for 100 hours. So they froze solid and came back no problem. If they were in the ground they could have been 40 degrees warmer.

    • @paulortiz2035
      @paulortiz2035 2 года назад +4

      Hostas are tough!
      I had some I never got around to replanting so were laying on top of the ground. In Chicago! Next spring they came up ready to go! That's tough!

  • @LoriThurstonInTunePhoto
    @LoriThurstonInTunePhoto 2 года назад

    Where do you over winter your hostas and other plants? I’m in indiana and we get a hard freeze. How could I protect them. I do not have a greenhouse, looks like you don’t either. I could probably swing something like you have. Do you have a video about your shelter?

  • @LostInThisGardenofLife
    @LostInThisGardenofLife 7 месяцев назад

    So inspirational ❤

  • @gottathinkupanewone
    @gottathinkupanewone 2 года назад +1

    Hostas can be really hardy as long as they have good soil and plenty of water. I've propagated hostas by transplanting a single leaf than had a hair of root still attached.

  • @MadisonMershon
    @MadisonMershon 2 месяца назад

    This guy is awesome

  • @firelands80
    @firelands80 2 года назад

    First Timer here!!❤😊🌿

  • @craigodem3815
    @craigodem3815 3 года назад

    This is really, really good!

  • @marezeedo
    @marezeedo 2 года назад +1

    I’m really enjoying your hosts videos. They are hard to find in my area. I’m in zone 9b.
    I’m wondering what is eating your leaves that I noticed in your plants? I have same thing. I’m thinking it is the Roly Poly bugs. Is the best way to get rid of them is to use organic DT?
    Thanks for any advice. These are my husbands favorite plants and I want to be successful. Backyard Gardner Marlyn

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      Some bug damage is reasonable and normal. I don’t do anything for holes here and there, minor leaf damage, etc. I’ve never had any major pest problems with Hostas or anything else.

  • @pedropereira8924
    @pedropereira8924 2 года назад

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge!!!

  • @coolroy4300
    @coolroy4300 7 месяцев назад

    I recently learned how to place rocks in the soil around certain plants like Hostas and Elephants ears that rodents like to nibble on .
    Also spraying with the casteroil based garden sprays works great too .Do you agree ?

  • @FastGardenGnome38
    @FastGardenGnome38 2 года назад +1

    What was the reason for cutting the leaves of the hosta after dividing them?

  • @kburkes4245
    @kburkes4245 2 года назад +1

    I'm trying to nail down the timeline on this. So if I buy a hosta now (April, zone 6b) I would let it grow this year, and then next spring divide it, and then let those babies grow another year two syllable size. Is that how it goes?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +2

      You can divide hostas anytime. I don't mess with it in winter, or in the heat of the summer. If you have hostas now that have multiple stems, you can divide them today, if you like. Really depends on what you want to do with them. I have hostas that could be divided now, or sold now (or in a couple weeks when they flush out more). Always selling some and dividing some. Time wise, there's no exact way to do it.

  • @grassman8684
    @grassman8684 2 года назад

    New listener. Love your channel. So basicaly what your saying on most of the plants is on average it takes about 2 years of growth before it'll sell?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      That's a good average for the types of plants I grow... from propagation to sale.

  • @nphrandom
    @nphrandom Год назад

    This is the one that is going to set me up, have a row of 20 year old hostas maybe 50ft down side of a trailer home every few ft is hostas and out by a ft just roots and mass hostas 😂 once i have the medium and pots along with are ready going to dig the entire lot up and will be propagating dividing and potting like crazy, have a 200sqft area a 100 sqft and 40 sqft area already covering and mulching to act as a place to store in a full south exsposure next to a 3 barrel water system and biodigestor outlet i really want to get at them now buuut... im not ready yet

  • @emilyalmansa4497
    @emilyalmansa4497 Год назад +1

    Hi. I love your videos! I am attempting to grow hostas for the first time but I keep finding several holes on the leaves of one particular plant every morning. I tried Sluggo, but will appreciate any suggestions.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад +2

      Slugs are just going to get their share of hostas. I don't have a definite fix... people try all kinds of things and swear by all kinds of home remedies that I've never tried.

    • @Nunya2025
      @Nunya2025 Год назад +1

      @@savvydirtfarmer the only thing that works for me is the soap/vinegar/water mix. On rainy days i go out and spray anything i want to keep.

  • @karenfries170
    @karenfries170 2 года назад +1

    Maybe you've been asked this before, but how do you make your potting soil? Thank-you for this wonderful video, the first of yours I have seen!

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +2

      Check out my DIY potting soil video.

    • @meilanhee
      @meilanhee 2 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer diy potting soil

  • @MartineReed
    @MartineReed 2 года назад

    Great video!

  • @sandybrown7005
    @sandybrown7005 2 года назад +1

    How are the plants protected in winter? Are they outside? Greenhouse? I'm trying to learn to propagate as a hobby, yet a bit clueless when it comes winter time.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      Most of my plants sit outside in the winter just as they do the rest of the year... uncovered. I don't do anything to them. Part of my learning curve for what I do is figuring out which plants survive over the winter with very few losses - that's part of the reason I grow what I grow.

  • @Joey-vw1id
    @Joey-vw1id 2 года назад

    Was that the Benny hill theme song playing when you were potting up the divided hostas towards the end of the video?

  • @thehallhive9425
    @thehallhive9425 2 года назад +2

    Great video! Your "hosta murder" comment cracked me up. Where do you get your little pots from? I'm trying to look into decent pots that don't cost a bunch so there's still profit margin.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      Apparently there is a "shortage" on pots now. For the most part, I buy them from a local supplier, and they are OUT. See also AMleo.com or Greenhousemegastore.com.

    • @thehallhive9425
      @thehallhive9425 2 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer thanks!

  • @user-msmac1970
    @user-msmac1970 6 месяцев назад

    Good video my wife and I plan on starting our nursery next year there are different house plants I am propagating now for that. I noticed you had your wheelbarrow with your potting soil just curious was that your mixture or was the bagged. If it was your mixture did you have your fertilizer mixed in all ready??

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  6 месяцев назад +1

      It’s my mixture; I fertilize everything by top dressing

  • @knotweedkninja8539
    @knotweedkninja8539 2 года назад +1

    Where do you purchase your pots. Seems like a pot cost as much as what you sell the plant for. Where is the profit?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      Various places... mostly local. Can get them at amleo.com or greenhousemegastore.com. Free from local landscapers. Pots cost about $.20 each, until everything went up. Now they're more like $.40 - $.50 each. Plants I propagate I have about $1 in them, sell them for $7.

  • @emmasurf8768
    @emmasurf8768 4 месяца назад

    Is you wanted to dig up overcrowded hostas, but want to sell them next year, would you recommend just sticking them back in an open bed and potting later,, it immediately potting after the dividing.I don't have a greenhouse so would either leave in sunroom or in the ground

    • @emmasurf8768
      @emmasurf8768 4 месяца назад

      i hope you can understand my post. AI keeps making odd grammatical auto correcting.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  4 месяца назад

      i would dig, divide, and pot.

  • @gabbysgoods827
    @gabbysgoods827 3 года назад +1

    Hi. I need to split my Hostas. I’m going to split the day lilies they are over crowding each other. Mine are to BIG !!!! New Subscriber. I’ve been growing my own plants 🌱 from seeds. Some plants 🌱. A Veggies Garden. A flower 🌸 garden. I didn’t realize I need to clean off the roots.

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +2

      I just clean off the roots to make it easier to see what I'm doing when I make small divisions.

    • @gabbysgoods827
      @gabbysgoods827 3 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer good 😌 idea 💡

  • @savinoandriano1484
    @savinoandriano1484 Год назад +1

    I have a question for you, by the way I love what you are doing God bless you and your family wish you all the success throughout your journey!
    My question to you is fruit trees persimmons they are a hot item it’s been a year and a half that I have trying to order an Asian or American persimmon tree and it is impossible everywhere and everyone is sold out. Maybe that is something that you would be interested in

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад

      What is your question?

    • @savinoandriano1484
      @savinoandriano1484 Год назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer can you grow persimmons trees, I tried buying one from every nursery but they all tell me that they are sold out! Have to go on there waiting list. Maybe that is something that you can add to your nursery

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад

      @@savinoandriano1484 there are thousands, literally endless items I could add to my nursery. Persimmon trees is certainly one of them.

  • @lindaferguson593
    @lindaferguson593 Год назад

    Do you have a list of perennials that do well in dormant month divisions? Thanks!!

  • @mtw2121
    @mtw2121 2 года назад +1

    great video ! (as always - can't thank you enough for your information & guidance) .. one question.. are you dividing and potting these up in the spring or fall ? i also live in zone 7 (SOUTHern NJ) .. keep up the great work

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      I usually divide in Spring, but you can really do it any time. thanks!!

    • @sandrakay26
      @sandrakay26 2 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer when you do it in the spring how long do you wait for them to be big enough to sell.
      I want to do it now but what do I do when they are grown over the winter. Does that make sense

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      @@sandrakay26 they will over winter in pots just fine. Hostas are about the toughest plant there is. Depends on variety and size of your divisions how long it takes to get to to selling size.

  • @LemonDropYum
    @LemonDropYum 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for the video. I'm going to try and do this for a yearly spring farmer's market in my area. Do hostas die back in a hard freeze? I'm in zone 9a and my hostas say they're good down to zone 3. When the winter comes, will they die and come back in the spring or will they tolerate the cold just fine?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 месяца назад +1

      Hostas will survive winter in pots just fine; particularly as warm as you are.

    • @LemonDropYum
      @LemonDropYum 3 месяца назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer I planted mine in the ground, not in a pot or green house.

  • @ejfishes7610
    @ejfishes7610 3 года назад +5

    Great video! I have a question, I live in zone 5B , so would you leave them outside during the winter in the tray? It can get down to below 0 here. Or would you move to an unheated shed / garage? Also, for someone starting out would you get a few plants from a big box store and divide those up vs a wholesaler? Finally, what size pot do you sell those to your customers? Than you for your time!

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +3

      Hostas are very tough/hardy plants. Are they hardy in your growing zone? They will be fine in pots/trays outside through winter as long as you don't go through a long dry spell and let them completely dry out. Their water needs are very minimal during winter anyway, so that's usually not an issue. I have bought plenty of hostas from the box stores as long as they are correctly labeled. If they just say "hosta" on them, that's a deal breaker. You have to know exactly what variety of plant you are selling always. I sell 90% of my plants in trade gallon size pots (3 qt), including hostas.

    • @ejfishes7610
      @ejfishes7610 3 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer thank you getting back to me! Yes they are hardy in our area. We actually have some in our yard but wasn’t sure if I should be dividing those up and selling or getting a few starts and go from there. Appreciate your time and learning a lot from your videos!

    • @paulortiz2035
      @paulortiz2035 2 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer I much my gardens once they have finally froze to at least 3-4 inches. THEN I much and cover the pots or stuff in the ground.
      Once they have been frozen I want everything to STAY FROZEN until next spring were they unthaw--- once!
      It is that freeze-thaw, freeze-thaw, freeze thaw, over and over that kills most plants. And the drying out when pots thaw doesn't help either.
      But black pots can certainly warm in the later winter sun and then freeze again during the nights. A Killer!
      Much well and don't let the mulch blow away. Bird netting is nice. Or in a poly hoop house. Mulched. And when the pot can thaw and not freeze rock hard, solid.
      Once it starts to warm up i start to uncover pots a bit and then remove the rest of the leaf mulch once spring has 'for sure' arrived! And i let nature do its thing to wake the garden up. Seems to work just fine!

    • @paulortiz2035
      @paulortiz2035 2 года назад

      @@ejfishes7610 I have seen hostas potted up by non-professional growers.
      They look sad, bedraggled and pitiful, to be honest. (The boss/owner of a garden center I worked at would pot her stuff up. It looked terrible and didn't sell--- at all! Similar stuff grown by a local, experienced and professional grower--- flew off the tables. His stuff look PERFECT! Not a blemished leaf, not a bug bite, and no mud caked, dirty pots! His stuff was absolutely gorgeous, healthy and, as I said, perfect looking in every way. His hostas were also 2-3 years old, grown in poly houses, in those pots, the whole time. His plants were stunning!!! The owners stuff was terrible looking and didn't sell. Had she not owned the place no one would have ever bought them from her. Plus, she potted from the ground, with just regular dirt from her garden!
      Bizzare, huh?
      I moved away but she wasn't in business very long. Just very, Very tone deaf! In one of the nicest, richest sections of Chicago she wanted to sell her bedraggled, homegrown, little plants, which were----- hostas!
      IT JUST DIDN'T HAPPEN!!! (We often just threw her stuff out it was so bad! She didnt know because she wasn't there often, she was at her 'farm' in Wisconsin--- growing stuff! To sell! Absolutely true story! I kind of hope she doesn't read this, but it's all true!!! Sadly.
      She got divorced and took her settlement and decided to become a grower! You know, how hard could it really be??!!) Ans: Harder than it looks!!!

    • @paulortiz2035
      @paulortiz2035 2 года назад +1

      @@ejfishes7610 If you really want to consider being a 'grower'--- go work for one for a year to see how much work is REALLY involved and LEARN a few things about how it is REALLY done!
      After all of that, think about it again! And go from there.
      It is NOT as easy as falling off a log!!!

  • @tomhahn6792
    @tomhahn6792 2 года назад

    Hello Savvy Dirt Farmer. I just came across you and your great video and saw your comment about Wolverine. Our Land of the Giant Hostas" in Milton, WI. that has 2,500 varieties of hostas and 440,000 plants for sale has Wolverine for sale. Best of luck. One question: Where are you located so I can determine your zone. Thank you.

  • @lindaduncan2954
    @lindaduncan2954 2 года назад

    Great, informative video! Thank you! New subscriber! 🪴🪴🪴

  • @jackiebrown8694
    @jackiebrown8694 8 месяцев назад

    Where do you get your plant tags in order to have them when you divide and make new plants?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  8 месяцев назад

      I make them by cutting up old window blinds and mark them with a #2 pencil. They last for years.

  • @frednobles2485
    @frednobles2485 Год назад

    Great teaching could you please put the name of the plants you mention on the screen

  • @DavinaEternal
    @DavinaEternal Год назад

    Where do you suggest buying nursery pots and trays?thx!

  • @charlottebush6598
    @charlottebush6598 Год назад

    Once divided where are the stored during the winter or are they replanted before the first frost?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  Год назад

      I divide them, pot them, then leave them alone. Next Spring they come up happy.

  • @marshallhosel1247
    @marshallhosel1247 2 года назад

    Thanks for the video!

  • @teresaholland4790
    @teresaholland4790 Год назад

    Super cool 😎

  • @tingczhao
    @tingczhao 2 года назад

    Great teaching video. What month is the best time to do this division in zone 8a? Thank you so much!

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      Any time is fine, Now is great! I try to avoid extreme heat and in the winter I just don't do it because I have an easier time working with them when they aren't so cold! But hostas are about as resilient plant as there is... they can handle being divided whenever you have inclination to do so.

  • @grasssnake3826
    @grasssnake3826 Год назад

    Do I need a greenhouse for winter time? Temps get into the teens here.

  • @nikkichevere
    @nikkichevere Год назад

    👌👏👏👏👏 Amazing thankyou

  • @jeanponce2017
    @jeanponce2017 2 года назад

    How late in the season can you take Hosta cuttings then set put them away for the season. Mid summer, late summer, early fall?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      I would say by early fall... that gives them a few weeks to settle into their new pots and begin rooting in before frost. They tend to "wake up" in Spring a lot more full if they were rooted in before frost.

    • @jeanponce2017
      @jeanponce2017 2 года назад

      @@savvydirtfarmer
      Thank you for the response. What I didn't mention was my girlfriend who is far from having a green thumb tried to get involved with my gardening and she planted a Hosta (either by a bulb or piece of root but I didn't see how it came out of the package) it was in the middle of an area of Easter flowering plants that have their own area. It's been about 5 years and now and not only does it get big it appears to be spreading on its own it shoots up white flowers from about 4 or 5 areas now and they look healthier then the other plants so I thought about trying to clone a few to move to another garden. I wasnt expecting to see having to remove it from the dirt and separate because she would kill me if I dug up her plant. I'll wait u til it's done flowering then try and cut a few out while leaving most of the plant still there. She shouldn't catch on being I have plants growing everywhere including propagating new fig trees off a tree I planted about 10 years ago that is literally a fig factory pumping out huge sweet purple flesh figs. I watched a couple videos on taking the fig cuttings and it was nice to see how easy it was to successfully propagate them. Thank You for responding I will look forward to watching more or your future and back videos

  • @joannekucks4343
    @joannekucks4343 2 года назад

    I’m moving from a condo to a 55+ apt that has a balcony. I have a lot of perennials that I’m leaving behind. Can I grow any perennials on my balcony like hostas, lilyofthevalley or lilies? I’m in Minneapolis and could keep them inside over winter or would I let them die off and replant the bulbs in the spring?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад

      Can't speak to lilies except that I know my daylilies won't overwinter in pots - I killed them all. Hostas? They'll thrive in pots over winter if they are hardy in your area. Main thing is to keep them moist without drowning them. They can freeze, get buried in snow (which is actually a great insulation), etc, but they won't do well with repeated freeze/thaw/rain unless they drain very well. Otherwise, they are a great plant to try.

  • @angelasaquatics4751
    @angelasaquatics4751 Год назад

    Just learned that you can cut across the top of the heat in a cross shape to get 5 new plant sprouts instead of one!!!

  • @josieraimondi6763
    @josieraimondi6763 2 года назад +1

    Should hostas ever be fertilized? I haven't in the past. What fertilizer do you recommend?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +1

      I fertilize all of my potted plants with a slow release fertilizer, brand Florikan.

  • @dreamcatcher5502
    @dreamcatcher5502 3 года назад

    Awesome !! Where can you get the identity tags for the pots ?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  3 года назад +1

      Mine are fancy. Buy cheap window blinds, cut them into 4 inch strips with scissors, and use them as tags. Works great and last as long as I need them to. Use #2 pencil to write on them.

  • @lukemagee462
    @lukemagee462 2 года назад

    I'm curious as to why did u cut the leaves off when potting them up? I'd have thought they needed them for photosynthesis?

    • @savvydirtfarmer
      @savvydirtfarmer  2 года назад +2

      More new leaves will grow from the center. I've found that once these hostas flush out, then divide them, those leaves don't seem to do much but flop over anyway. I can't prove it it, and maybe it doesn't make any difference. I just know that what I do works. It makes their trays cleaner and easier to water without leaves flopping everywhere. In some cases when I'm not able to get much (if any) root material, there are no roots to support the leaves. Good question, and just my thoughts. I've done it cutting the leaves off and not cutting them and I can't see any noticeable difference either way.

  • @Irawry0u
    @Irawry0u 3 года назад

    Great video!! Thanks so much!!