patandchickens
Deeply Rooted
I was wandering around for a couple minutes yesterday with a camera. Here is a view out the front window towards the chicken tractor's current spot. The path and bed look only so weedy because I love blue flax and have a hard time bringing myself to remove volunteers, all the more so once they get a decent size, and now that they're starting to flower I figure I will just leave them there for a little while longer...
)
Here is part of a dry mostly-shady bed, in case anyone else besides me is perpetually on the lookout for things that like dry shade (Lamium, lily of the valley, lemon balm, 'Hermann's Pride' yellow archangel, yellow perennial foxglove, violets, perennial geranium, and most of the bushes are snowberry)
And some more of it, showing why Lamium cultivars (especially the white and pale-pink flowered ones, although this is not one of them here) is my very favorite dry-mostly-shade-can't-kill-it-with-a-stick groundcover:
This is another nice groundcover, for mostly-sunny or partly-shady areas (edited to add: ok, I found a tag: Veronica "Waterperry Blue")
Everyone with ANY degree of shade and reasonable organic content in soil ought to grow virginia bluebells (well, except way far south I guess):
And finally, an obscure plant that I highly recommend if you weed frequently or just like to bend over and 'pet' plants: Potentilla fragarioides. The leaves are strawberry-shaped but covered with a fine, plushy 'velvet', and are WONDERFUL to brush against. You have to fondle them before buying because there is considerable variation among plants. I weed around these potentillas more often than I really need to because it gives me an excuse to "pet" them. So sue me
They also have really bright yellow flowers with (it doesn't show up well on the photo) a spot of orange towards the base of each petal. I keep reading that they're supposed to bloom in late spring and then sporadically thru the summer, but mine give up in mid June and that's it for the year <shrug>. First photo has my foot in it for scale 
Pat


Here is part of a dry mostly-shady bed, in case anyone else besides me is perpetually on the lookout for things that like dry shade (Lamium, lily of the valley, lemon balm, 'Hermann's Pride' yellow archangel, yellow perennial foxglove, violets, perennial geranium, and most of the bushes are snowberry)

And some more of it, showing why Lamium cultivars (especially the white and pale-pink flowered ones, although this is not one of them here) is my very favorite dry-mostly-shade-can't-kill-it-with-a-stick groundcover:

This is another nice groundcover, for mostly-sunny or partly-shady areas (edited to add: ok, I found a tag: Veronica "Waterperry Blue")

Everyone with ANY degree of shade and reasonable organic content in soil ought to grow virginia bluebells (well, except way far south I guess):

And finally, an obscure plant that I highly recommend if you weed frequently or just like to bend over and 'pet' plants: Potentilla fragarioides. The leaves are strawberry-shaped but covered with a fine, plushy 'velvet', and are WONDERFUL to brush against. You have to fondle them before buying because there is considerable variation among plants. I weed around these potentillas more often than I really need to because it gives me an excuse to "pet" them. So sue me



Pat