The bad news first.
Impatiens — the beloved bedding plant, the darling of dappled shade — continue to be dogged by downy mildew disease.
Even plants that look healthy when you buy them at the garden center can become infected several weeks to months later and present the telltale symptoms, including yellowing or curling leaves, blossom drop and stunted growth.
The disfiguring spores of this mold travel through water and air, and once the soil in a flowerbed is contaminated, downy mildew can persist for eight to 10 years. Fungicides have proven ineffective against this plant pathogen.
But there is good news.
There are disease-resistant impatiens for those who can't let go of the popular plants that fill shady spots with bright, consistent color. Bounce, an interspecific hybrid, provides the traditional horizontal habit that impatiens are prized for, growing knee-high in Northern gardens. And, as its name implies, the plant bounces back if you miss a watering or two.
Lew Gerten of Gerten's Greenhouses is "really impressed" with the new Impatiens Sun Harmony Series, which he describes as shade-tolerant and free-flowering with a semi-upright, mounding habit.
Of course, lots of landscape experts confess a secret distaste for the ubiquitous impatiens. While they never applaud diseases in plants, some say they hope downy mildew will encourage gardeners to step out of their floral comfort zone and discover new colors, shapes and textures for their shady spots. Here are annual alternatives to impatiens: