Ron Livingston |
Ron Livingston was born one of three children in Detroit, MI. He has been with his partner for twenty one years and has a daughter from a previous marriage. For almost 36 years, Ron was a science teacher in the Detroit Public School System. He also worked at Lawrence Technology University, where he taught operation physics, plant sciences and heredity. Retired now, he spends his time on photography, hiking, traveling, body building and, naturally, breeding Hosta which he has been doing since 1997.
Hosta Garden |
Pink Flamingo |
He chose to work with Hostas because of their popularity, easy to access sexy parts, sometimes bees do the work for you, and the genetic diversity available. When he first breeding Hosta, a good friend, Stuart Asch was there to mentor him and pass along the knowledge he had gained while he was mentored by Pauline Banyai. Ron says that the hardest part of actually breeding Hosta is that the plants you've produced and become very fond of either die for no apparent reason or don't survive the winter. His other least favorite part of the hobby is when it becomes work and no longer fun. He used to do 5,000 different crosses per season, it became tedious, back breaking labor. Now he stops when he wants to and it's back to being fun again.
Tremont Spice |
Ron says he doesn't keep track of the number of seeds he produces and sows, 'it is not how many you plant that counts, it is the quality of those you plant that counts. Also, as they grow, it is extremely important to be able to closely monitor them. If you grow too many of them, you have less time to observe each one.' The initial selection process is to pull the fastest growing, best looking seedlings and give them bigger pots. The other smaller seedlings will usually get a chance to prove themselves over winter in the same flats they were sown in. The ones that don't impress him get composted or given away. Space is at a premium and plants that aren't worthy don't get the garden real estate. The evaluation process can take anywhere from five to twelve years, depending on stability of variegation. He doesn't believe in registering his plants, subjecting them to other peoples rules and regulations, after all, it won't make them better plants and he doesn't seek notoriety. There are too many factors that go in to what makes a plant worthy of introduction to make an accurate list.
'I am often best guided by serendipity. I may follow a direction for a while then something will pop up and redirect me…some things are so unexpected, for instance, “ I didn’t know hostas could do that !! “…next thing I know I am using the “new” look in my breeding program.'
Afterglow |
Ron's advice for the new hybridizer is 'The green world is full of many miracles, don’t think one will not happen to you. Don’t let you hobbies become jobs, maintain “sane” limits on them'
Tenny Up |
More on Ron Livingston and pictures of more of his Hosta introductions can be seen here. http://www.foosf.com/ron.php
If you would like to be profiled in a horticultural (any area of the field) blog entry or know of someone that should be, send me an email at codyvtaylor@live.com
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