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						 This is a streaked cultivar of 
				the species, H. montana,  that forms a 
				giant size (32 inches high) mound of mottled foliage and flower scapes that reach over 6 feet 
				tall. It was 
				found in Japan and brought to the United States 
				before 1990. This plant is sometimes mislabeled as H. montana 
				'Chirifu Tochigia'. According to
				
							The Hostapedia by Mark Zilis (2009), "Some plants of this cultivar are infected with a 
				virus but not all. It is a popular breeding plant and the 
				resulting seedlings (some variegated, some green) have not 
				tested positive for known 
							viruses."  
						
						 "Plant 
						is a mutation of H. montana and there are 2 
						forms, either white- or yellow-spotted/variegated. In 
						the wild from Gumma and Tokyo prefectures." 
 
						Mikiko Lockwood in an article on The Hosta Library titled, 
			
			A Little About Japanese Hosta Terms  defines the term chirifu 
						as speckled, mottled or overall variegated and the term oba or ooba as large leaf, 'Oba Gibōshi' or 
			H. montana. 
			 
						
						 An article about H. montana  'Chirifu' by 
Herb Benedict in 
			The 
				Hosta Journal (1991 Vol. 22 No. 2) states that, "About 
seven years ago, on one of her biannual trips to Japan, Hideko Gowen of 
Excelsior, Minnesota, brought back a very beautiful large gold-splashed form of 
Hosta montana. It was found in the wild by 
						Mr. Sekini, in Tachigi Ken, Japan.  
George Schmid has suggested the name H. montana  'Chirifu'. 
Chirifu is a Japanese  word which means "splashed" or "overall-variegated...The bloom stalks are well 
over six feet tall each with forty or more very fertile flowers." 
						 
  
  
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