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    Containers as Focal Points
  • Comfortable Alfresco Dining
    Comfortable Alfresco Dining
  • Building a Compost Bin
    Building a Compost Bin
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    Save Money by Growing Your Own
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    Designing with Curved Terraces
  • Fast-Growing Trees for Impatient Gardeners
    Fast-Growing Trees for Impatient Gardeners
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    Dwarf Citrus Trees
  • Lawn Alternatives
    Lawn Alternatives
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    Stylish Shady Containers
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    Make a Succulent Topiary
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    NEW Video Series: There's a Better Way
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    Indeterminate or Determinate Tomatoes?
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    Plant an Easy-to-Water Strawberry Jar
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    Homegrown / Homemade
  • Colorful Selections for Shade
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    Thoughts From a Foreign Field
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    Garden Confidential: A Plant Walks into a Bar
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    Fragrant Plants for Pathways
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    Mulch for a Healthy Garden
  • Plants that Spark!
    Plants that Spark!
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Browse Plants

Narrowed By:Uses: Shade + Botanical Name: S - U
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 listings   Sort By: Sort
Salvia koyamae Salvia koyamae
(Japanese yellow sage)
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Hardiness Zones: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

At first glance, this Japanese woodland native does not look as if it belongs in a shade garden, but
I find its spreading foliage and light-colored flowers do wonderfully as a small ground cover in dry-shade areas. Creamy yellow flower spikes sporadically appear from summer to fall, but hand-size, hairy green leaves are another attraction of this plant. It contrasts well with so many other fine-textured shade perennials that the flowers can be considered just a bonus. Japanese yellow sage is not choosy about soil pH or type. The spreading stems root as they touch the ground, eventually forming large, wide clumps. You can easily transplant any piece of rooted stem to fill gaps in your shade garden. -Jimmy Turner, Perennials for dry shade, Fine Gardening issue #133

Tolmiea menziesii ‘Taff’s Gold’ Tolmiea menziesii ‘Taff’s Gold’
(Piggyback plant)
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Hardiness Zones: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

With its mottled cream/green foliage, 'Taff's Gold' can brighten any dark garden area. This western-native ground cover forms plantlets form at the base of the older leaves—hence its common name “piggyback plant.” This plant needs little or no water, except in lengthy periods of drought. Piggyback plant looks good in hanging baskets and containers. -Sylvia Matlock, Regional Picks: Northwest, Fine Gardening issue #127


Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 listings   Sort By: Sort