Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 59Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 28Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 90Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 51Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 65Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 20Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 63Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 83


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-10-12” author: “Michael Robinson”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 75Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 41Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 14Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 68Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 67Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 20Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 49Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 83


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-09-23” author: “Paula Gordon”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 95Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 92Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 10Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 74Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 39Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 9Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 7Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 95


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-09-02” author: “James Daquino”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 49Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 92Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 98Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 32Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 76Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 99Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 69Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 13


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-10-10” author: “Mark Mckinney”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 7Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 26Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 59Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 49Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 90Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 1Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 28Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 75


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-09-13” author: “Jason Williams”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 43Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 35Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 48Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 32Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 57Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 29Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 7Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 14


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-09-03” author: “Michael Olson”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 49Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 57Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 85Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 35Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 23Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 35Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 93Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 13


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-10-12” author: “Paula Davis”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 58Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 65Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 9Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 37Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 22Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 75Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 85Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 46


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-10-08” author: “Rick Sanmiguel”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 40Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 64Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 83Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 41Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 82Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 20Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 3Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 35


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-09-14” author: “Patricia Peterson”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 6Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 86Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 39Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 80Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 14Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 33Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 99Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden - 29


title: “Try These 6 Native Shade Plants For Your Sustainable Garden” ShowToc: true date: “2024-10-06” author: “Elmer Edwards”

Choosing Stunning Flowering Native Shade Plants

In shaded areas, it’s often difficult to establish healthy plant populations unless they are native to the area. Native shade perennials have acclimated to local conditions over thousands of years, so are more likely to survive those conditions. In fact if biodiversity is your goal, you should incorporate at least 80% native plantings to the area. Try these knockout flowering natives for a stunningly sustainable plot.

1. Phlox

One of my favorite perennials is phlox of which I have several varieties, some requiring full sun and one called Blue Moon which is partial to full shade. Blue Moon is a lovely, low-growing, spring blooming perennial native for USDA zones 3-8. It is perfect for the woodland garden. For anyone keen on growing phlox, this creeping, semi-evergreen is lightly fragrant and looks lovely combined with spring flowering bulbs as an underplanting. It is one of the best native plants for dry shade, requires little maintenance and can be divided to form new plants every three-five years. A pretty native that attracts butterflies.

2. Virginia Creeper

In my neck of the woods, Virginia creeper (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) can be seen scrambling up telephone poles, fences and any other vertical structure. It is so prolific in my 6b zone that it borders on being invasive and yet is the perfect low maintenance, rapidly growing, deciduous vine that provides practically instantaneous cover and privacy in shade to full sun areas. As native flowering plants go, Blue Moon is one of the showiest and most fragrant. This violet blooming native from Green Promise Farms creates displays that are resilient and delicate. Delightful spring perennial! Native to North America and Mexico, Virginia creeper is a flowering perennial vine in the grape, Vitaceae, family. In the wild, this vine can grow up to 100 feet (30m), but don’t panic, it does quite well with aggressive pruning to retard its size. Its leaves are made up of five coarsely toothed leaflets with a pointed tip accented by blue berries. In the fall, the foliage bursts into vivid hues of red, mauve and purple.

3. Celandine Poppy

Wood poppy or celandine poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum) is native to the moist soils of deciduous woods and looks beautiful along a shaded path or amongst a wildflower garden. This wild poppy loves partial shade and moist soil, making it an excellent native choice for stream beds or shaded landscape water features. This plant emerges in the early spring in a tangle of lobed, dark green foliage accented by silver, followed by showy clusters of yellow blooms by mid-late April. This herbaceous native shade perennial can be grown in USDA zones 4-9. Excellent groundcover plants, wood poppies are also attractive cover for native wildlife. Celandine poppy aggressively self-sows, so a perfect placement is an area that needs full coverage with plenty of room.

4. Fringed Bleeding Heart

Similar to the Pacific bleeding heart, fringed bleeding heart is native to the Eastern US. Both have similar heart shaped, pink blooms and wispy, fern-like, gray-green foliage but this one has narrower flowers with curved outer petals. Dicentra eximia is a deciduous perennial and blooms from early spring through the first frost. A bushy plant, it is quick to send up leaves in the spring and matures to a height of 1-2 feet (30-60cm) and three feet (just under a meter) across. It spreads slowly by rhizomes. This plant enjoys moist, well-drained, soil in filtered shade. Combine it with other native shade plants or use it as a mixed border plant. It’s especially showy when planted en masse. Grow in USDA zones 3-9.

5. Bush Honeysuckle

Bush honeysuckle are low-maintenance, suckering native plants, good for soil stabilization and erosion control. They also work well in mass plantings or as hedges. This deciduous shrub can be grown in USDA zones 3-7 in sun or shade, is unfussy about soil, and is drought tolerant at maturity. There are two types of honeysuckle available to the home gardener keen on natives – Northern bush honeysuckle and Southern bush honeysuckle. Although bleeding hearts have a reputation for being brief springtime beauties, this native bloomer from Green Promise Farms can flower to September. It’s also irresistible to butterflies and hummingbirds. Bush honeysuckle has a mounded habit and grows to 3-5 feet (1-1.5m) in height and the same across. The first flush of leaves in the fall are red, becoming green then bronze. Tubular blooms form in clusters from June to September, which are extremely attractive to pollinators. After flowering, small seed capsules appear from July to September. In the fall, the Northern bush foliage stuns with hues of red, yellow, orange and purple, making it one of the most vivid native shrubs for shade.

6. Red Buckeye

The red buckeye (Aesculus pavia) or firecracker plant is one hot native tree. It requires dappled shade to partial sun. The more sun the plant receives, the better it will bloom. And the blooms are magnificent! This deciduous shrub blooms with erect red panicles in April and May to beckon hummingbirds and other pollinators. Red buckeye grows to a height of 12-15 feet (4-4.5m) and the same across. It prefers rich, moist and well-draining soil, and can be grown in USDA zones 4-9A. While the spring show of crimson blooms is spectacular, later development and fall of the buckeyes is less so. Depending on where your shrub is grown, they need to be cleaned up and they are toxic to most living creatures, including humans. Still, buckeyes are said to bring good luck if you carry them on your person, much like a four leaf clover. This article features products available from third party vendors on the Gardening Know How Shop.

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