We just bought this house and I’m trying to figure out what to plant in this area. It’s on the North side of the house so it’s pretty shaded. There is already a live oak, a cedar elm, and some purple heart. Would love something that fruits or flowers but given the lack of sun I know that’s probably not possible. Any shade tolerant native suggestions to keep this from getting muddy?

by G_LandDog

15 Comments

  1. hotttsauce84

    Very possibly to get some great native flowering and plants with seasonal interest. Here is a great resource. You can filter to your light requirements, soil type, etc at the top. Most of these plants can be found at The Natural Gardener, Greensleeves, and Barton Springs Nursery.

    https://www.austintexas.gov/watershed-protection/plant-guide

  2. Foggitis

    Inland sea oats loves shade. Also have Greg’s mist flower in the partial shade and it works OK it does better in the sun, but it still does OK in the shade. Frog fruit does wonderful in the shade as well as the sun and it’s a beautiful ground cover. Turks cap also thrives in the shade. I have Turks cap along the fence row like yours and it has filled out that whole area. I have to contain it a little bit.

    https://preview.redd.it/86xu6on71etg1.jpeg?width=4032&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=c137546298b3b85ddbad599773e289b0e45677c4

  3. kaydeebugg

    Chile pequin, pigeonberry, beautyberry, cedar sage, Turks cap, flax lily (does best with some sun, even dappled sun), inland sea oats, rock rose, Mexican honeysuckle, Bear’s breeches (not native but well adapted).

    Go wander at Ladybird Wildflower Center sometime and see what’s growing in the shaded spots; they’ve got good signage so you can start getting an idea of what appeals to you.

  4. cat-tumbleweed

    My yard is very similar, with more shaded greenbelt vibes than typical Austin xeriscaping.

    I have webberville sedge along path edges, with inland sea oats, beautyberry, golden groundsel, brazos penstemon, and mistflower to fill in the yard. It’s a nice mix of textures and colors that bloom throughout the seasons and very happy in the shade. Lots of butterflies too!

  5. skibidigeddon

    Heartleaf skullcap and cedar sage make a really nice combo in areas of heavy shade like this.

  6. crlynstll

    I’m going to dig up some Inland Sea Oats. LMK if you want them. They do spread….

  7. Ornery_Enthusiasm529

    My whole yard is basically shaded! Coralberry and pigeon berry are two of my favorites.

  8. tmanblue59

    I would restore the walking path first. That might help you decide.

  9. OGBoluda777

    Hiya, you’ve already got some horse herb aka straggler daisy there, so that’s nice. 👌🏽

    I’d also check this one out ([nativebackyards](https://nativebackyards.com/native-ground-covers/)) — I had your same question and found it. Frog fruit is also mentioned here, and I want some!

  10. MadMaximus311

    American/Mexican Beautyberry varieties would do very well here, and get a bit taller/fuller than some of the other suggestions here.

  11. honeybea-lieveit

    Red Columbine – there is also a native yellow variety but I’m not sure it does as well in shady spots as its red cousin, at least in my experience – evergreen 

    Gregg’s mistflower – will aggressively spread if it likes its home – pale purple fuzzy flowers are very popular w pollinators, especially butterflies – dies back in cold winters – sometimes looks a bit weedy if you don’t do a Chelsea chop 

    Brazos Penstemon (Penstemon tenuis) – tall stalks with pinkish purple flowers in spring – evergreen 

    Ohio Spiderwort – makes lovely evergreen clumps resembling grass with long stalks containing blue/purple flowers at the top during spring/summer

    Turk’s Cap – comes in a variety of flower colors, especially pink and red – very prolific growers with lots of flowers – ends up becoming shrub-like in appearance – can be aggressive – dies back in the winter at least in N TX 

    Lyreleaf sage (Salvia lyrata) – makes a lovely evergreen groundcover with lovely stalks of pale purple flowers 

    Coneflower (purple is most ‘natural’ color) – evergreen – big flowers 

    Obedient plant – evergreen – pale pink flowers

  12. meand13others

    somebody posted a site yesterday, not sure if it was here or in another gardening group, but you pop in your zipcode and it gives you a list of all the natives for your area, and you can select, full sun or full shade etc. I don’t know if I can post links here, but the site was called easyscape

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