Shade Loving Plants
The lushness of shade-loving plants is a glorious sight in the heat of Summer. Perennials have fresh foliage each year and many flowering perennials enjoy a little shade. I particularly want to cultivate semi-shade to provide a place for the exquisite Meconopsis betonicfolia (Tibetan Blue Poppy) and pink M. nepaulensis, dainty columbine-like Semiaquilegia, Erythronium species (Trout lilies) and Trillium species. Flowering Plants for shade and semi shade include flowering perennial plants, ground cover plants as well as feature plantsNerines also grow well in pots and make a good floral display in a container near the door or on a patio. These are a bulb that prefers to be left undisturbed, so only divide one they have become overcrowded. Nerine flexuosa 'Alba' is an autumn flowering white nerine. Nerine Fothergill Major is an orange-red early flowering variety, late summer. Lots of different species and cultivars, look for Nerine bowdenii, Nerine bowdenii "manina forest" form, Nerine filamentosa, Nerine fothergillii major and Nerine kregii with its fascinating twisted leaves. |
| Deciduous trees provide such a lovely, filtered shade that many perennials thrive beneath them. Some perennials are deciduous in Winter - such as hostas - so Winter-growing bulbs such as snowdrops (Galanthus) planted between clumps, extend the season.Crab-apples, for example, flower in Spring and have colourful fruit and leaves in Autumn, then let the sun through in Winter to allow perennials such as Winter Rose (Helleborus) to gain some needed Winter sunshine. My hellebores are not watered in Summer yet flower reliably each year, from June until, well, November last year, but usually September, in pinks, plum, white or green. |
![]() Shade Loving Hellebore Plants |
Epimedium (barrenwort) is a tough perennial that has delicate lemon, yellow, white or pink flowers on 30cm stems in Spring. The heart-shaped leaves are often dappled bronze on opening and some varieties tint red in Autumn. Mine are not fully deciduous in Winter so I cut back the old leaves in early Spring to better see the spurred columbine-like flowers. English Primrose (Primula vulgaris) and the smaller P x juliana alba flower in Spring also, above rosettes of soft green leaves. The lemon or white flowers are held on short 10cm stalks, making a pretty ground-cover. The clumps can be divided every couple of years in Winter, to produce many plants for a delightful drift. These enjoy the Winter sunshine under deciduous trees and require no watering in my garden. |
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Summer sees hostas flowering, my favourite being Hosta grandiflora which has pure white, perfumed trumpet-shaped flowers over apple-green foliage. Most of these handsome clump-forming perennials have wonderful dappled leaves, paddle-shaped, with lemon, grey or white variegation. Hosta sieboldiana has lilac flowers over blue-grey leaves, puckered like seersucker. Hostas thrive in semi-shade, requiring some watering in Summer, and I grow several in pots, placed around the front door each Spring until late Autumn. Snail control is important to prevent unsightly leaves with holes for the remainder of the season. |
![]() Hosta sieboldii 'Kabitan' A great plant for shade |
Dicentra spectabilis (Bleeding Hearts) and D. formosa (Ladies' Lockets) flower in late Spring and early Summer with elegant arching stems of heart-shaped flowers. Both are happy in a moist, shady spot and D. formosa is fairly drought-tolerant. Lush ferny leaves die back in Winter so I interplant with snowflakes or miniature daffodils to give interest in Winter and early Spring.
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Jill Weatherhead. |
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