Companion Planting with Impatiens
Before getting into what to plant with impatiens, let me tell you what impatiens bring to the table as companion plants. Impatiens attract beneficial insects. As stated above, they add long-lasting, vibrant color to dark shady areas, and make excellent borders. Impatiens’ fleshy, succulent-like stems store water and make them drought-resistant, so they do not compete with other plants for water and can be used in dry shade beds. As companion plants, the dense foliage of impatiens can keep the soil moist and cool for its companions.
Companion Plants for Impatiens
An old-fashioned favorite in the South is pairing impatiens with azaleas. Other shrub companion plants for impatiens are:
Rhododendrons Holly Boxwood Yews Fothergilla Sweetspire Camellia Hydrangea Daphne Kerria Japanese pieris Mountain laurel Summersweet Witch hazel Spikenard
Older landscapes tend to just have yews or boxwoods planted in shady areas around the house. While it’s nice to have that evergreen effect throughout the winter, these beds can be quite boring in the summer when all the others are full of blooms. Impatiens can border these monotonous evergreen beds, adding the pop of color they need. In shade containers or flower borders, these make lovely companion plants for impatiens:
Asparagus fern Sweet potato vine Coleus Caladium Begonia Fuchsia Elephant ear Bacopa Lobelia Wishbone flower
When companion planting with impatiens, their bright pink, red, orange, and white flowers beautifully add contrast to plants with dark or yellow foliage. Some perennial impatiens companions with dark foliage are ajuga, coral bells, and cimicifuga. A few yellow foliage perennials that nicely contrast impatiens include Aureola Japanese forest grass and citronella heuchera. Additional companion plants for impatiens are:
Columbine Astilbe Ferns Forget-me-not Hosta Balloon flower Bleeding heart Jacob’s ladder Goat’s beard Monkshood Turtlehead