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Edited on Fri May-11-07 11:22 PM by susanna
Your thread interests me, because I have similar problems, though I'm north facing. I have a large house in an older urban neighborhood that once the sun gets high enough in the sky, my front beds are very shady and cool as the height and adjacent buildings block most everything.
A couple questions for you: 1) are you building-locked (neighbors on both sides), and 2) do you have any space in the back of your house (West exposure)? If you have back space, you can do more. That's been my experience, anyway. You can look into container gardening for plants that need more sun there.
I agree with some of the other posters about lettuces - they should do well in your front area (with the exception of the really hot part of summer, when most will bolt). Some of the available lettuces - especially heirlooms - are beautiful enough to be ornamentals, with the added bonus that you can pick leaves as you need them and leave the plant to grow more.
According to one of my books (I zipped through it real quick) some relatively shade-tolerant (you'll probably be looking at Partial Shade) Veg/Herb plants include:
Light Shade Tolerant Pole Beans Beets Brussels Sprouts Cabbage (except Chinese Cabbage) Carrots Cauliflower Celery Garlic Onions
Partial Shade Tolerant Broccoli Most Greens (lettuces, spinach, etc.) Raddichio Chives Cilantro Kale Oregano Parsley Peas (needs trellising) Potatoes Radishes Sage
As for ornamental flowers and such, pansies like the cool and aren't that picky about shade from my experience; also, some hostas will do great on just a few hours of sun a day. I also have day lilies that are thriving in my mostly-shade front beds. Regular (not the sun-loving variety) Impatiens can be gorgeous in shade and there are so many beautiful colors to choose from. I like to carpet those suckers in my shady front. It makes it look like I know what I'm doing. ;-)
My final advice would be to try a few experiments, even if you think there isn't enough sun. You might be surprised at some of your results. I have placed plants needing full sun in my semi-shade spots and had good luck (of course some have croaked, too). Try a few things and see what happens. I think that I learn more from my mistakes in gardening than I ever learn from my successes. (Truth be told I have the sneaking suspicion that my successes are in spite of me, and not because of me.)
Enjoy whatever you decide to do and good luck!
on edit: clarity
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