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Shrubs for containers in shade.

(18 Posts)
vegansrock Fri 21-Apr-23 06:50:14

I have a bay tree in a pot by my shady front door. It has survived for several years. Occasionally clipped and repotted.

grimpy Thu 20-Apr-23 20:52:05

Camellias are attractive plants but their flower buds are very susceptible to overnight frost if they are subject to rapid defrosting ,which would be the case with a position in early morning sun.

Hetty58 Thu 20-Apr-23 20:41:39

Notagranny44, I agree, as they're reliably evergreen right down to the base, hardy and can be clipped into shape. My Fatsia Japonicas are leggy - leafy at the top with bare stalks further down.

25Avalon Thu 20-Apr-23 20:39:11

Go for something evergreen and winter hardy and happy in a pot. How about a Camellia? It will need ericaceous compost as it prefers acid soils. Flowers winter/spring and available in different colours.

DamaskRose Thu 20-Apr-23 20:19:33

Thankyou J52.

Notagranny44 Thu 20-Apr-23 19:23:54

Try either the golden or the cream variegated euonymus - they are evergreen, very tolerant and brighten up any shady spot

Greyduster Thu 20-Apr-23 18:35:21

Skimmias are very partial to deep shade and have flowers and berries at different times of the year. Evergreen.

teabagwoman Thu 20-Apr-23 18:16:21

Thank you everyone, I didn’t think I would have as much choice. I’m leaning towards a Fatsia because I’ve had one in the past and didn’t kill it!

J52 Thu 20-Apr-23 16:06:00

DamaskRose

Would a Fatsia cope with north of Scotland winters??

My Fatsia, at out Scottish home is on a westerly hillside and grows very well, unlike the one languishing in the Midlands garden.

Severnsider Thu 20-Apr-23 16:05:06

Hostas like the shade. (and slugs like the hostas!)

Seriously, the leaves are big and green and the flowers last for ages.

Greyduster Thu 20-Apr-23 15:51:28

Sorry, escallonia don’t like shade, but I know viburnums do because I have one.

Greyduster Thu 20-Apr-23 15:46:38

What about an escallonia? Evergreen, flowers in summer and autumn. Or viburnum tinus, also evergreen but you get flowers in winter.

PinkCosmos Thu 20-Apr-23 15:04:17

What about a conifer. Some are quite tall and compact plus they are evergreen.

DamaskRose Thu 20-Apr-23 14:44:35

Would a Fatsia cope with north of Scotland winters??

Davida1968 Thu 20-Apr-23 14:34:56

Mahonia?

Whitewavemark2 Thu 20-Apr-23 14:24:00

Rhododendron provided the compost is acid.

J52 Thu 20-Apr-23 14:23:13

A Hydrangea would be perfect, but they are not evergreen. How about a Fatsia Japonica, evergreen, grows well in a tub and is tolerant of shade.

teabagwoman Thu 20-Apr-23 14:17:36

I’m trying to future proof my home and want to install a key safe. I’d like to put a shrub in a container in front, to obscure it from view, but it will only get sun first thing in the morning. Can anyone suggest anything that would cope with this?