At a
glance
Latin name: Farfugium japonicum
'Jitsuko's Star'
Common name: double-flowered leopard plant
Flowers: 3-inch double yellow daisies
Foliage: large, rounded, shiny deep-green foliage
Mature height: 2 ft.
Hardiness: winter hardy Zones 7 to 10
Soil: well-drained
Exposure: part sun to light shade
Water usage: frequent
Sources: mail order or Internet suppliers
Thanks to a grant from the Founder's Garden Club of
Dallas, I have started a small shade trial area for the weird, wacky and
underused. One question I get a lot is What plant can be used in shade?
Well, slowly but surely, the trials in this area are helping me discover
some new plants other than Asian jasmine and English ivy.
One
plant I have been familiar with for quite awhile is leopard plant, a spotted
form of this particular genus. Personally, I like the polka dotted foliage,
but some gardeners think it just looks sick. So I was pleased to run across
'Jitsuko's Star' three years ago while perusing the Plant Delights catalog (www.plantdelights.com).
This variety has shiny green leaves, loves light shade, and in late fall
sends up a fountain of 2" golden-yellow, double-star-shaped blossoms. The
flowers start in early October and last through our first light frosts. The
one in my trial garden is in absolute full bloom right now! After a hard
freeze the foliage will die to the ground until early spring.
So many of our shade plant choices have fine-textured,
lacy leaves – like wood fern (Thelypteris kunthii) – that I find
the bold, saucer-sized leaves of 'Jitsuko's Star' to be a great contrast in
the shade garden. This plant will never attain the level of worship that
hosta has reached, but for our climate it’s a much better shade perennial.
You probably won't find 'Jitsuko's Star' on the shelves of your local
nursery. It just isn't that popular yet, but you can easily find it on the
website mentioned earlier or by entering the name in Google for other
Internet sources.
About the author: Jimmy Turner is the
Director of Horticulture Research at the Dallas Arboretum. Visit
www.dallasplanttrials.org for
information on his trials. For more plant profiles by Jimmy,
subscribe to Neil Sperry's GARDENS Magazine.
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