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Many gardeners complain that they can鈥檛 grow plants in the shade other than hostas and ferns. Not true! Here are 10 beautiful shade plants from my own garden鈥攑lus a list of perennial and annual flowers for shade!
Shade gardens often bring to mind hostas, ferns, and perhaps some astilbe. However, plenty of gorgeous, unique, colorful plants seek shady nooks. Most are also cold-hardy and need little maintenance once they are planted correctly.
10 Best Shade Plants for the Garden
1. Heuchera (Coral Bells)
My shade garden is colorful and work-free. I started with commonly known as Coral Bells. Foliage color is their strength, ranging from the washed amber of 鈥楪inger Ale鈥 to the glossy black-red of 鈥楤lack Beauty.鈥 Add a couple of unusual ones like 鈥楳idnight Rose鈥 with hot pink-splashed black leaves or the vivid orange of 鈥楶each Flambe,鈥 and you don鈥檛 need flowers.
They keep their color throughout the year, are slug-proof, and deer hate them. Plus, their tiny flowers, which appear in mid-spring, attract hummingbirds! They turn brown by midsummer and should be removed along with old leaves. Cut a few flower stalks and three or four leaves for a quick, high-impact bouquet when blooms are at their peak.
Coral Bells are easy to plant and grow. I only have to add plenty of humus to the soil and mulch thickly with wood chips. Even -27F in the winter doesn鈥檛 faze them.
I also found a host of other plants that were just as tough and lit up the north and northeast borders of against my house. They also are unattractive to deer and slugs. Here are the ones in my garden and why I love them.
2. Black Bugbane (also called Black Cohosh and Black Baneberry)
Dark-purple, almost black foliage is gorgeous and retains its color all season. Then tall, furry white flowers grow above the foliage in late summer, adding architectural style. Use dark-colored foliage plants to create 鈥渟hadows鈥 between other plants to provide dimension.
3. Hellebores
The first buds open, covered with snow, in late winter. Flowers are still on plants in July. But, they brown and tatter. Plan on cleaning up old flowers and leaves from them and heuchera after the Fourth of July.
4. Bleeding Heart
Who doesn鈥檛 love the arched sprays of tiny pink hearts that cover plants in early spring? If the weather stays cool, the flowers remain for weeks. Lacy foliage goes dormant in early summer, making room for later flowering plants like Bugbane and Thalictrum. See how to grow a Bleeding Heart.
Thalictrum provides floral interest in my shade garden after Bleeding Heart and various primroses have ended their bloom cycles. I love Black-stemmed Thalictrum 鈥楤lack Stockings,鈥 which starts growing and sending up tall stalks (5-6 feet) about when Bleeding Heart is going into dormancy. Place them nearby so Thalictrum鈥檚 emerging growth covers Bleeding Heart鈥檚 dying leaves. Fluffy pink blooms last for weeks.
7. Ferns
My favorites are Dre鈥檚 Dagger and 鈥楽ilver Falls鈥, a Japanese painted fern. Ostrich ferns are great, too, but be mindful that they grow tall and spread. They鈥檙e perfect for creating a fern dell, as I have in part of my shade garden.
If you鈥檙e looking for ferns with color, look up the 鈥淟ady in Red鈥 cultivar with striking bright red stalks and delicate lacy fronds. Or, check out the autumn fern Brilliance, which is coppery pink in spring and then goes to green in summer and colors up again in autumn.
8. Solomon鈥檚 Seal
This shade-loving perennial (Polygonatum odoratum) grows on low, gracefully arching stems with pale green leaves edged in white. In spring, white bell flowers dangle from the stem. It鈥檚 rarely bothered by insects or disease, deer-resistant, and grows well under trees.
9. Dianthus (Pinks)
An old-fashioned favorite, perennial dianthus (commonly known as 鈥減inks鈥), is ignored by deer and attracts pollinating insects, butterflies, and hummingbirds with their nectar!
There are many, many varieties of dianthus, including Sweet William (Dianthus barbatus), chedder pinks (Dianthus grataniapolitensis), Chinese pinks (Dianthus chinensis), alpine pinks (Dianthus alpinus), and, of course, the one you will see most often, garden pinks (Dianthus plumaris).
Astilbe is a perennial with beautiful, showy flowers atop glossy, fern-like foliage. A deer-resistant plant, astilbe comes in a variety of colors and looks best when planted in groupings (versus alone). They also offer interesting textures as the seasons change.
Astilbes鈥 flower clusters vary in size from 6 inches to 2 feet, and their height ranges from 6 inches to 5 feet, depending on the variety. If you have a shady area, astilbes are a great way to add color and texture to a place where other flowers won鈥檛 thrive.
The hosta, of course, is the quintessential shade plant. For deer, however, hosta plants are like candy. If you do not have deer, hostas are wonderful plants that come in peaceful shades of green, blue, and yellow鈥攚ith variegated leaves or solid leaves.
While it鈥檚 easy to get carried away with fancy, colorful flowers, remember that a shade garden鈥檚 strength is as a calming place. Keep that comforting feeling by separating different kinds of showy plants or variegated plants with quieter companions like this quintessential shade plant.
Here鈥檚 a more complete list of perennial plants for shade. Perennials form the backbone of your garden, coming back year after year.
Astilbe
Asters (blue wood is gorgeous, as is white wood)
Bear鈥檚 Breeches (Acanthus mollis)
Bee Balm (Monarda)
Bellflowers
Bleeding-Heart
Brunnera (aka false forget-me-not)
Columbines
Forget-me-not
Foxglove
Hardy geranium
Hellebore
Hydrangea (some varieties)
闯补肠辞产鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;濒补诲诲别谤
尝补尘产鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;贰补谤
Lamium, White Nancy
Ligularia
Lily-of-the-Valley
Liriope
Lungwort
Winter cyclamen
Lamium Hermann鈥檚 Pride
Kirengeshoma
Monkshood
Phlox divaricata, Phlox stolonifera
Primroses
Scilla siberica
Siberian Iris
Snowdrops
Spotted Deadnettle
Tiarella
Toad lilies
Virginia bluebells
Violets
Wood poppy
Woodland sunflower
Yellow corydalis
Annual Plants for Shade
Here鈥檚 a short list of great annual shade plants to consider. Annual flowers add color and interest and fun during the gardening season. (Some can be perennials in warmer climates.)
Alyssum
Baby Blue Eyes
Begonia
Browallia
Calendula
Cleome
Coleus, Red
Copper plant (Acalypha wilkesiana)
Fuchsia
Monkey-flower
Nicotiana
Pansy
Snapdragon
Wishbone Flower (Torenia)
Understanding Shade Definitions
When we speak about 鈥渟hade plants,鈥 we are generally talking about plants that grow in 鈥減artial shade鈥 (a few hours a day) or dappled shade, not 鈥渄eep shade鈥 where even indirect light rarely penetrates. Take a look at your garden and consider how many hours of light it receives. Of course, your plants will also tell you when they don鈥檛 get enough light with weak stems or browned leaves.
There are many different interpretations of 鈥渟hade鈥 plants. It may help to review these plant shade definitions.
Doreen Howard, an award-winning author, is the former garden editor at Woman鈥檚 Day. She has gardened in every climate zone from California to Texas to Oklahoma to the Midwest. She鈥檚 especially fond of unusual houseplants and heirloom edibles. Read More from Doreen G. Howard
I absolutely love your shade garden more than any other I have seen. I realize this was posted some years ago, but was hoping that maybe you had a general layout of your garden. If not, I'm just going to wing it as best I can from your pictures, but a layout map would be great!
Hi, Richelle, Thank you for your enthusiasm for Doreen’s garden ideas. She was one in a trillion鈥攌nowledgeable, generous, and irrepressibly enthusiastic about gardening and any plant you can name. Plus, she was a devoted loyalist to the 蜜桃恋人 and we will be forever grateful. Doreen passed away in March 2014 (oh, my, has it been that long already?) so you are going to have to wing it, as you say. But consider her guidance here and elsewhere in the column/blog and you will doubtless develop a magnificent bed. Cheers!
Great post, Doreen! I live in N.E. Ohio. Recently bought a very old house, and the previous owners left us a virtual garden center here. Not having any experience with gardening at all, I had to deal with years of overgrowth, and not knowing what most things even were. I did recognize some weeds, but neighbors alerted me as to others.
Anyhow, boy could I use your help!! I have Peonies that bloomed sparsely, now have taken on what looks like mildew. I understand that I should cut them down to the ground when it gets truly cold outside, and will do that. As to a shade garden~ I am wondering, can I plant one underneath an old spruce tree that we lopped off plenty of underbranches from? There is a least 5 ft. of height space under it, and I'd like to do something with it, if possible. I just have so many questions. Are you available for consult? :^).
Thanks!
Yes, you can plant a peony under the pruned spruce. Set it on either the east or west side of the tree trunk. A wonderful (and free) source of information about your various plants is the local county extension service. The extension agent and Master Gardeners are encyclopedias of information about your climate and will gladly visit your garden for a consult!