My Kinda' Living >
Homemaking > Gardening
5 Perennials For Shade Gardens
We all know that flowers love sunshine, but did you realize that
there are perennials that love the shade?
You can create a beautiful garden in the shade that can act as a
cooling retreat on those hot summer days. By using perennials, your
flowers will come up year after year for a lifetime of enjoyment.
Shade gardens offer much more than gardens that sit in the
blazing sun all day. You can actually sit in them and enjoy them.
Pull up a nice lounge chair or have a beautiful granite bench
installed. Sit and read on a hot day, or just sip a drink and enjoy
the birds and butterflies.
Like any other garden the best shade gardens will have taller
plants in the back against the house or woods, medium growing plants
in the middle and the shorter or ground cover plants on the inner
edge. Since most perennials bloom for a short time, you ‘ll want to
plant them so that you always have color in the garden. Stage the
planting so that each area has a blooming plant at all times of the
season.
Here’s a list of some perennials that thrive in the shade:
Astibe - This plant comes in 3 “sizes” which grow to 20",
30" and 40" in a variety of colors. You can make a whole garden just
with this 1 flower! It looks best planted in groups and has clumps
of fluffy flower spikes.
Foxglove - This is a great plant for the back row of the
garden as it can grow to 5 feet tall. It comes in a variety of
colors and has large spikes filled with bell shaped flowers. This
beautiful flower is highly toxic if ingested so be careful with it
around animals and small children.
Lily Of The valley - This wonderfully fragrant plant has
dainty white bell shaped flowers. It is great for a ground cover or
the front of the garden as it grows to only about 6" tall.
Lousiana Iris - This beautiful velvety purple black flower
produces 4" blooms that last well into June. Plant in groups for
best effect. Grows about 2 feet tall.
Virginia Blue Bells - This medium sized plant has lavender
bell shaped clusters. It grows to about 2 feet in height and is very
hardy and easy to grow despite it’s fragile appearance.
Lee Dobbins is a contributing writer for
backyard-garden-and-patio.com where you can find out
more about building your dream garden and growing garden flowers. |