Birds & Blooms

Top 10 Shade Plants

Shady backyard? Don't look at it as a detriment, but an opportunity to experiment with color and variety. With so many plants that thrive in shade, try planting one of these favorite shade-loving plants.

Astilbe

This perennial serves as a great border plant. Showy wands of small blooms appear in summer. The ferny foliage looks great even when the plant is not in bloom.

Bleeding Heart
Photo: RDA, Inc./GID

Bleeding heart

Delicate-looking foliage and heart-shaped flowers make this bloom a captivating spring favorite. Long-lasting blossoms open in late spring, covering the plants with charming pendant flowers in shades of rose pink and creamy white.

The plants are dormant by midsummer, so they're best planted at the back of a border, where later-blooming flowers can camouflage the dying foliage. Waiting to cut the plant back enables it to self-seed, ensuring an even more heartwarming display the following spring.

Caladium
Photo: RDA, Inc./GID

Caladium

Mostly grown for its colorful foliage, caladium will do great in shade gardens. Also, caladium thrive on humidity. What more could you want from a plant? Caladium provide both foliage and color!

  • Common Names: Caladium.
  • Botanical Name: Caladium bicolor.
  • Hardiness: Zones 9 to 10 (annual elsewhere).
  • Bloom Time: Spring.
  • Size: 1 to 2 feet high and wide.
  • Flower: Greenish white spathes.
  • Growing Advice: Must have well-drained soil, or it will rot.
  • Prize Picks: Offset the green expanse of your heavy shade garden with Pink Beauty. White Queen proves a real standout with its red-veined white foliage.
  • Ferns

    Fern
    Photo: RDA, Inc./GID

    This popular shade favorite is grown for its foliage and comes in a wide variety of species and cultivars. Plant ferns where you'd like to add architectural interest to your garden, whether it is in the form of a tall background fern or a lower-growing fern.

    Ferns have actually been around since the beginning of the Mesozoic era, which is about 360 million years ago. That means ferns have been growing since before flowering plants even evolved. That's quite a history!

    Foxglove
    Photo: Park Seed

    Foxglove

    In ancient times, these tall, graceful flowers were believed to be favored by fairies. Today, they're prized for adding storybook charm to the garden.

    Foxgloves are biennials or short-live perennials. They generally don't flower until one season after they're planted, but they self-sow readily. If spent flower heads are left in place, the seeds will distribute themselves, producing a new crop of "volunteers" each spring.

    Coral Bells
    Photo: TerraNova

    Coral bells

    Striking, often colorful foliage, dainty flowers, and an adaptable nature make coral bells a sure winner for just about any yard.

    Hosta
    Photo: Park Seed

    Hosta

    This hardy garden favorite is prized for adding texture and color to shady areas. Hostas form dense leafy clumps, with blossoms rising up to 3 feet above the foliage.

    Thousands of named cultivars offer a wide array of leaf colors, shapes, and textures. While some hostas tolerate sun, those grown in partial shade generally produced the most handsome, longest-lasting foliage.

    Hostas are virtually carefree plants. Their heavy foliage helps reduce weed growth and retain soil moisture, but hostas may need extra water during extremely hot weather to prevent scorching.

    Impatiens
    Photo: Park Seed

    Impatiens

    Reliable impatiens are shade-garden favorites throughout North America, quickly growing to fill in bare areas with undulating mounds of color. These useful landscape plants work equally well in borders, foundation beds, and containers.

    Once planted, impatiens need very little care. They bloom from spring to first frost, and unlike some other annuals, they require no deadheading to keep the flowers coming.

    Solomon's Seal
    Photo: Park Seed

    Solomon's seal

    In winter, after the leaf stalk of a Solomon's seal has died, the scar is said to look like the Seal of King Solomon, once a king of Israel and that is how this perennial got its unusual name.

    The tall, dramatic foliage is the main attraction, but the little bell-like flowers that dangle under the stems are enchanting to observe when they appear in spring.

    Sweet Woodruff
    Photo: Park Seed

    Sweet woodruff

    Despite its delicate appearance, this plant is tough and well suited to wooded areas. Its white spring blooms last for several weeks, and even its apple-green leaves have a pleasant scent.