Hosta Hill, George Schmid's half-acre garden in Tucker, Ga., is an example of how beautiful and diverse a shade garden can be. Consisting of mostly foliage plants, the garden--under a canopy of high pines--is crisscrossed with informal paths and contains a tiny stream reminiscent of the Appalachian mountains. Schmid has also installed a Japanese-style dry stream bed and has used various garden ornaments reflecting both European and Asian influences.A native of Germany and a retired engineer (he worked on the design of the SIC booster rocket that helped propel the U.S. mission to the moon), Schmid comes from a family of artists and has used his backyard as a living canvas. In the past several years he has refined his garden by removing most of his hosta collection (which numbered in the thousands and which he has shared with friends, neighbors and his children) and adding a variety of other shade-loving plants. Texture and foliage color create interest. Understory trees like Stewartia pseudocamellia, Japanese maples and select hostas (including George's own hybrids) blend with rare arisaemas, ferns, mosses, gingers, disporums, Solomon's seal and ornamental grasses.
The founder of the Georgia Hosta Society, Schmid is the author of the The Genus Hosta and the recently published An Encyclopedia of Shade Perennials. "I am a foliage gardener, not a flower gardener," he says. "I deal with textures and leaf sizes and different shades of green."
Some of his choice plants include: