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Shady Native Color -
This spring at Tree of Life we want to help brighten up those shady areas of your home garden or landscape. Why not plant some beautiful native plants? Plant these shrubs and perennials and sit back to see songbirds, hummingbirds, and butterflies enjoy them! Read more about our featured plants this month: Golden currant (Ribes aureum) and Redberry (Rhamnus ilicifolia) available in five gallon container sizes, and, Pacific Coast Iris (Iris douglasiana) and Coral Bells (Heuchera sp.), currently available in one gallon size.
Shady Five Gallons Available!
Please call the sales office with inquiries.
Bursts of Color! Looking for some low growing color this spring in shady areas? Consider planting Douglas Iris and Heuchera maxima or Heuchera hybrids. These shade-loving native plants are the perfect solution for brightening up shady areas you may have under an oak, along the eaves of your house, or in containers on a patio. They are excellent planted in mass, (pictured), and will tolerate light irrigation.
Coral Bells, Heuchera hybrids and Giant Alum Root Heuchera maxima, offer profuse flowers in the spring. Heuchera are compact rosette-forming perennials with pretty rounded leaves and delicate flowers atop slender stems rising 1-3 feet above the foliage.
Both Heuchera and Iris share similar horticultural requirements. Their flowers and contrasting foliage compliment each other well. These plants attract hummingbirds and other pollinators with their showy flowers. With them, you not only gain spring color in challenging shady sites, but also a few welcome spring visitors! If you would like to learn about even more native choices for those tricky shady spots, please see our Dry Shade Sage Advice. For more songbird attracting, berry producing favorites, please see our Natives for Songbirds Sage Advice. We hope that you enjoy this spring season, with its (brief) light showers and, of course… we hope you have had a chance to get out and see some beautiful blooming California native plants!
Happy planting! |