Trending
- Nvidia executives cash out $1bn worth of shares
- eBay Smells Opportunity in EU’s Digital Product Passport Mandate
- Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for June 29 – CNET
- SCOTUS’s CASA Decision Ends Nationwide Injunctions, Creating Uncertainty Around Enforcement of Executive and Agency Actions
- This Under-the-radar Bermuda Resort Has 4 Pools and a Private Beach on the Island’s South Shore
- How to Submit to Better Homes & Garden’s 2026 Food Awards
- Exploring the No Tipping Trend: What It Means for Diners and Workers
- Can China’s MiniMax-M1 AI Topple US Rivals? We Put It to the Test – Decrypt
“This is a shady garden and naturalistic play space. I wanted to add shade-tolerant plants with lots of textures and different-colored leaves,” Prassas says. “These include ferns, hostas, grasses and sumacs that make it more interesting for the kids. Another plant I included is witch hazel, which flowers when nothing else is flowering.” The witch hazel species he planted is Autumn Embers vernal witch hazel (Hamamelis vernalis ‘Autumn Embers’, zones 4 to 8).
Woody plants Passas added to the garden include ‘Little Henry’ Virginia sweetspire (Itea virginica ‘Little Henry’, zones 5 to 9), cutleaf staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina ‘Laciniata’, zones 3 to 8), Snowmound spirea (Spiraea nipponica ‘Snowmound’, zones 3 to 8), bottlebrush buckeye (Aesculus parviflora, zones 4 to 8) and a variety of hydrangeas.
How to Create a Beautiful Shade Garden