This week we’re going to do something a little different on the GPOD: We’re going to be looking back over the years of gardens we have shared and pull out some of our favorites to visit again. And today the posts are all going to be stunning shade gardens. Gardening in shade can feel a bit like a challenge or limitation, but lots of GPOD contributors have turned that challenge into an opportunity and made beautiful gardens.
This is Janet Best’s garden in Spencerport, New York. It can be hard to get a lot of color in the shade, but she’s managed by combining lots of different foliage colors with pink blooms of astilbe and hanging baskets full of begonias. Pink flowers are repeated throughout the garden (see more: Woodland Retreat), giving it a calm, unified design.
The next shade garden, created by Stan Hobbs in Glenville, New York, takes inspiration from Japanese garden design to create a beautiful, relaxing space. The moss-covered ground, so typical of Japanese gardens, is beautiful and really allows the eye to appreciate the beauty of each individual plant. See more of this garden here: Japanese Inspired Garden.
Carolyn Faulkner, gardening in Brunswick, Maine, finds gardening in the shade not just beautiful but easier, with fewer weeds and a welcome break from the summer heat. See more here: Woodland Garden.
Sarah Froneberger’s North Carolina garden proves that you can have lots of flowers in the shade, with these truly stunning plantings of hydrangeas (Hydrangea macrophylla, Zones 5–9). Check out more of this garden: Hostas and Hydrangeas.
Marlene Mullet in northern Ohio likes experimenting with unusual plants for her shaded garden, and finds that more things thrive and bloom there than the plant labels might suggest!
Read more on finegardening.com