evergreen, bit of colour, shade

Started by zac123, December 08, 2008, 15:01:02

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zac123

hi all, not sure if this is the correct place  to post about this but....

i'm looking for evergreen ground cover for one of my borders, but the problem is it receives little to no sunshine.

has anyone got any ideas?

zac123



ceres

Vinca minor (Lesser Periwnkle).  Pretty flowers.

Mrs Ava

Pulmanaria, bugle and ferns smother the ground in my deep shade area.

star

Hello and welcome Zac ;D

I grow ferns, Sweet woodruff, Violets, Foxgloves (new), Primroses, and a real pretty thing I cant remember the name of :-[. There's an Acer there too, it gets an hour or two of sun in summer at that end of the border.
Helebore, and even a fuschia ;D
I was born with nothing and have most of it left.

GrannieAnnie

Pachysandra?  We have beds of that and it tolerates shade and drought well.
You can grow your spring bulbs through it.
The handle on your recliner does not qualify as an exercise machine.

hopalong

If you have room for a shrub, Camellia x williamsii does very well in shade - "Francis Hanger" is a brilliant white one. Camellias need an acid soil, of course. Hydrangea quercifolia is also very good and fairly small for a hydrangea, with cones of white florets. Fatsia japonica is great if you want striking foliage, not quite so good if you are mainly after colour.

Periwinkle is good ground cover for shade. Vinca minor, suggested already, is great in all soil conditions and does not mind dryness; Vinca major can be very invasive but there are some attractive variegated ones - I I have one scrambling over an unsightly bit of wall and it can be controlled all right with regular pruning.

Hope this helps.
Keep Calm and Carry On

ACE

I use a silver lamiun in all those shady places, great for groundcover and it does not fully die back in the winter.

zac123

thank you so much to everyone for getting back. i'm sorry i havent responded sooner, i think i must have email notifications switched off.

thanks for the suggestions.

zac

Kea

Geraniums (cranesbill), alchemilla mollis

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