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						  Dr. Ralph (Herb) and Dorothy Benedict of Michigan registered this 
							self-pollinated seedling of H. 'Dorothy Benedict' in 1990. 
							It is named for their close friend, the former 
							president of
							
							The American Hosta Society and a 
							former hosta registrar, 
							Dr. Jim Wilkins of Michigan. With leaves that are cupped, 
				heavily corrugated with thick substance, this plant forms a 
							large size 
				mound about 20 inches high and 40  inches wide. In late 
				June, it begins to produce near white flowers. 
						According to
				
							The Hostapedia by Mark Zilis (2009), "...varies from plant to plant, 
				but most specimens now exhibit gold-centered, dark 
				green-margined leaves. 
							Dr. Ed Elslager of Michigan utilized this cultivar in his 
				breeding work." 
			 An article about H. 'Dorothy Benedict' by 
Herb Benedict in 
			The 
				Hosta Journal (1991 Vol. 22 No. 1) states that, "During 
1990, the six best, 7 year old seedlings were named and three were registered.
 
	
		
			| #1. 'Gil Jones' | A large upright  
			
						H. 'Sieboldiana'-type, 
			with blue-green leaves and a wide cream edge. |  
			| #2. 'Jim Wilkins' | A low spreading reverse with a cream 
			center and with a blue-green border on its leaves. |  
			| #3 'Hideko Gowen' | A tall, upright reverse with a maple 
			leaf cream center, a wide green edge and a thick cupped round leaf. |  
			| #4 'Tom Boy' | A small, slow-growing miniature  
			
						H. 'Sieboldiana' with a chartreuse edged, cupped, round green leaf. |  
			| #5 'Ruby 
			Benedict' | A low, spreading, very gold leaf with a 
			green edge, and a very puckered, round leaf. |  
			| #6 'Bashful Polly' | A wavy edged, splashed leaf. |  Another 'Dorothy Benedict' seedling, grown and registered by 
	Jim Wilkins, is 'Herb Benedict', a splashed, round leaf with blue overtones 
	and winner of the Savory Shield Award in Jackson (MI), 1988, for the best 
	new seedling growing in a 
	National 
	Convention of The 
	American Hosta Society tour garden." An article in 
			The 
				Hosta Journal (1999 Vol. 30 No. 2) states that a pot of 
				this cultivar sold for $1,400 at The American Hosta Society 
				Convention auction that year. 
			 
  
  
  
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