Impatiens

Uses:

  • Perfect For Shady Areas!
  • Border Plants
  • Containers

Features:

  • Low Maintenance
  • Colorful Flowers
  • Attracts Birds & Butterflies

Sunlight:

  • Full Shade to Partial Sun
  • Less Than 5 Hours of Direct Sun
  • North or East Sides of Homes

Impatiens are the perfect plant to bring colorful flowers to shady areas! With long lasting blooms, impatiens can be used as border plants, bedding plants or in containers.


Growing Impatiens

Impatiens is a genus with more than 1,000 species of flowering plant and make up the family Balsaminaceae. Also known as Touch-me-not plant, busy Lizzie, patient Lucy, and sultana, this plant is a favorite for its nonstop colorful blooming the entire growing season. Its blue green foliage and blooms of red, purple, blue, white, orange, pink, or yellow make it stand out from other companion plants. There are two types of Impatiens flowers, Impatiens Wallerina and New Guinea Impatiens. New Guinea Impatiens tend to be resistant to a powdery mildew that can develop on the Impatient plant.

The Best Way To Use Impatiens

Impatiens thrive in rich well draining soil and prefer partial sun and shady conditions. Impatiens grow in hardiness zones 10 and 11, but do not like drought conditions. If left without moisture, they can quickly wilt, yet bounce right back with a drink of water.

Growing 8-24 inches high and offering summer to fall non stop blooms, Impatiens are perfect for landscape gardens, summer beds, ground cover, shrub borders, or beneath a shade tree. It is also a great container plant, window box, patio, deck or hanging basket option.

  • Beautiful groundcover
  • Brightens a dark area in your yard
  • Works well with combinations of plants
  • Available in many different colors
  • Typically grows 8-24 inches tall, yet is compact
  • About Impatiens

    Genus
    Species
    Family
    Impatiens
    Walleriana,hawkeri ,balsamina ,omeiana ,capensis ,niamniamensis ,eglanteria
    Balsaminaceae

    Common Names:

    Jewelweed, Touch-me-not, Snapweed, Patience


    Native To:

    Asia, Africa, and the Americas

    Plant Type:

    Annuals

    Foliage Type:

    Deciduous, Herbaceouss

    USDA Plant Hardiness Zone:

    6 - 9

    Flower Color:

    Flower Bloom Time:

    Late spring to fall

    Growth Habit:

    Clumping, Spreading, Upright, Mounded

    Attracts:

    Bees, Butterflies

    Tolerates:

    Humidity

    Resists:

    Mildews, root rot,aphids, whiteflies, spider mites