
18 Best Plants To Add Privacy To Your Yard
This article explores a variety of plants suitable for creating privacy in Southern yards, offering alternatives to traditional fences while enhancing garden aesthetics. The selection includes a mix of small trees, shrubs, vines, and tall grasses, each providing unique textures, colors, and growth habits. The article emphasizes that plants can create both solid walls of separation and subtle senses of seclusion, and their density and height can be adjusted to meet specific enclosure desires.
The featured plants offer diverse characteristics. The Oakland® Holly, for instance, is a dense, pyramidal evergreen that grows 15 to 20 feet tall, providing a substantial privacy hedge and attracting winter songbirds with its red berries. Cleyera, a classic evergreen shrub, reaches 10 to 15 feet and tolerates a range of sun exposures, making it versatile for hedges or mixed borders. Crossvine, an aggressive grower, is ideal for covering fences and arbors with its tropical-looking red-orange blooms, while Camellias offer year-round screening with glossy evergreen foliage and vibrant winter blooms.
Climbing Hydrangea, a woody vine, can quickly cover arbors and fences, offering elegant foliage and fragrant white blooms in summer. Carolina Yellow Jessamine, a Southeast native vine, provides fragrant golden yellow blooms in late winter against evergreen foliage, suitable for screening porches due to its less aggressive nature. Podocarpus, known as Japanese yew, is a narrow, conical evergreen perfect for manicured hedges or vertical accents in mixed plantings, tolerating heavy pruning and performing well in the Middle to Coastal South.
Fringe Flower, with its purple foliage and fuchsia blooms, adds pizzazz to privacy plantings and is low-maintenance, drought-tolerant, and deer-resistant. 'Taylor' Juniper offers privacy in tight spaces with its columnar habit, growing 20-25 feet tall but only 3-4 feet wide. 'Janed Gold' Arborvitae provides a slender, pyramidal evergreen solution for narrow areas, brightening gardens with vibrant golden foliage. Bright 'N Tight™ Carolina Laurel is a broadleaf evergreen that attracts butterflies and birds with fragrant blooms and black fruits, and its lustrous foliage resists deer.
'Cloud Nine' Switch Grass is a native clump-forming grass that reaches 5 to 7 feet, offering airy flower heads and providing food for wintering songbirds, tolerating various conditions. Anise Tree, a dense evergreen shrub native to the Southeast, comes in multiple species with different ornamental traits, ranging from star-shaped crimson blooms to golden foliage. Indiangrass, with vertical stems reaching 5 to 7 feet, makes a stately addition to privacy screens or for lining narrow spaces, featuring golden plumes in late summer.
Wax Myrtle, adaptable to wet areas, sun or shade, and coastal gardens, can be sheared into a dense hedge. Yaupon Holly, a native tree or shrub, can be clipped into various shapes and features bright red berries, with compact cultivars available for smaller spaces. Tea Olive, loved for its strong apricot fragrance and glossy leaves, can be grown as a shrub or tree and tolerates Southern heat, humidity, and various soil types. Lastly, Aucuba, or Japanese aucuba, thrives in shady spots, filling in areas where other evergreens might not grow, with gold-speckled or variegated cultivars illuminating dim areas and bearing red berries.
#PrivacyPlants #SouthernGardens #LandscapeDesign #EvergreenShrubs #FloweringVines #GardenScreening #PlantSelection #HedgePlants #PrivacyPlants #SouthernGardens #LandscapeDesign #EvergreenShrubs #FloweringVines #GardenScreening #PlantSelection #HedgePlants
0 comment in total
No comments yetYou may also like
































































