Gardening guides from the Garden Helper
Celebrating 10 years of helping your gardens grow!
[ The Garden Helper][ Gardening Basics][ "How to" Guides][ House plants][ Glossary of Terms]
[
Garden Encyclopedia][USDA Zones][ Monthly Reminders][ Free Screensavers][Recipes]
[ **** The Gardener's Forum ****]

vines and flowers

Creating a Butterfly Friendly Garden

Click here for
Hummingbird flowers
Click here for
PLANTS TO ATTRACT AND FEED SONG BIRDS
Click here for
SEEDS AND TREATS FOR SONG BIRDS

Flowers and plants that attract butterflies.


starButterfly Weed
Asclepias tuberosa
starButterfly Bush
Buddleia davidii
starButterfly Flower
Schizanthus wisetonensis
starButterfly Lily
Hedychium coronarium
starButterfly Pea
Clitoria ternata
starYarrow
Achillea millefolium
starColumbine
Aquilegia
starSea Pink
Armeria maritima
starAster
Callistephus chinensis
starSea Holly
Eryngium bourgatii
starConeflower
Echinacea purpurea
starSweet Pea
Lathyrus odoratus
starChrysanthemum
Chrysanthemum
starShasta Daisy
Chrysanthemum shasta
starGloriosa Daisy
Rudbeckia hirta
starButterfly Orchid
Oncidium papilio
starViolets
Viola pedata
starBee Balm
Monarda didyma
starBlanket Flower
Gaillardia aristata
starLilac
Syringa vulgaris
starRabbitbrush
Chrysothamnus nauseosus
starCinquefoil
Potentilla fruticosa
starBurning Bush
Dictamnus albus
starEnglish Lavender
Lavendula angustifolia
starGayfeather
Liatris spicata
starPassion Flower
Passiflora incarnata
star

Butterflies
What Attracts Whom?

PlantButterfly it attracts
AlfalfaEastern black swallowtail, orange sulphur, dogface, large wood nymph
AsterCheckered white, common & orange sulphur, question mark, painted ladies, red admiral, buckeye
Black-eyed SusanGreat spangled fritillary, pearly crescentspot
Butterfly BushSwallowtails, mourning cloak, comma anglewing, painted ladies, red admiral
DaisyPearly crescentspot, red admiral, queen
DandelionCabbage shite, common sulphur, comma anglewing, red admiral
DogbaneSpicebush swallowtail, checkered white, common & orange sulphur, gray hairstreak, spring azure, pearly crescentspot, mourning cloak, American painted lady, buckeye
GoldenrodCommon & orange sulphur, gray hairstreak, American painted lady, red admiral, viceroy
LantanaSwallowtails, cabbage white, Gulf fritillary
LupineCommon blue
MarigoldMilbert's tortoiseshell, American painted lady
MilkweedSwallowtails, checkered & cabbage white, common & orange sulphur, gray hairstreak, spring azure, pearly crescentspot, common blue, great spangled fritillary, question mark, mourning cloak, painted ladies, red admiral, viceroy, monarch, queen
MintSwallowtails, cabbage whie, gray hairstreak, painted ladies, red admiral, monarch, large wood nymph
PrivetSpring azure, painted ladies, red-spotted purple
Purple ConeflowerSilvery blue, great spangled fritillary
Queen Anne's LaceEastern black swallowtail, gray hairstreak
Red CloverCabbage white, great spangled fritillary, painted ladies, red admiral
ScabiosaPainted ladies
Sweet PeaGray hairstreak
Sweet PepperbushSpicebush swallowtail, question mark, American painted lady, red admiral
ThistleSwallowtails, dogface, Gulf fritillary, pearly crescentspot, Milbert's tortoiseshell, American painted lady, red admiral, viceroy, monarch
VerbenaGreat spangled fritillary
Winter CressCheckered white, gray hairstreak, spring azure, pearly crecentspot

Creating a Butterfly Garden

Butterflies don't need anything fancy or expensive. Just a large, open, sun-filled area; some flowers, for adults; some food sources, for caterpillars; shelter; puddles; and rocks. You might consider planting an herb garden if you enjoy herbs - many butterfly species do too. Reserving a section of your yard for native flowering plants and for weeds like dandelion, nettle, and milkweed should also help guarantee a good variety of butterflies. It's best to avoid using any peticides at all.

One note for dedicated gardenners who may be appalled at the idea of actually inviting caterpillars in for lunch: very few butterfly species cause harm to garden plants. If they do become a nuisance - for instance, if cabbage whites are decimating your nasturtiums - picking the larvae off by hand is a simple task.

About puddles. Butterflies can't drink from birdbaths or other open water. But give them a damp spot of wet sand or dirt and they'll often flock around it. In some species, young bachelor butterflies most commonly exhibit this "puddling" behavior - perhaps the equivalent of visiting the local pub after work.

Butterflies need shelter from predators and wind. Ideal are hedges; groups of small trees or shrubs; or walls, fences, trellises covered with vines. Possible plantings include honeysuckle and butterfly bushes; and for vines, passion flower, pipevine, or hops. (For what to plant for various butterfly species, see "What Attracts Whom?" Above.

Hatching Butterflies

I don't know of anything more magical and inspiring than the metamorphosis of a caterpillar into a butterfly. To watch this drama from opening curtain to finale, you need a caterpillar, or larvae; the leaves it eats; some moisture; a can; and patience. Later you'll need to make a simple cage.

Common butterfly species lay their eggs on particular plants (usually trees), and it is often on the underside of their leaves that you'll find caterpillars. Some of these plants/trees and the butterfly larvae they host are milkweed, dogbane (monarch); cow parsnip, fennel, dill (swallowtails; cottonwood, wild cherry, willow, maple, alder (tiger swallowtail); willow, cottonwood (mourning cloak); birch, alder, willow, gooseberry, currant, wild rhododendron (anglewing); cabbage, mustard, nasturtium (cabbage white); thistle, pearly everlsting (painted lady).

When you have found a caterpillar, put it in a large can along with some of the kind of leaves it was feeding on. Clean and add fresh leaves as needed, along with some twigs. A caterpillar sheds its skin several times as it grows - when it sheds all its legs except those on its first three segments, it has reached full growth and will soon begin to spin its cocoon, attaching it to a twig or the bottom of the can.

The pupa (cocoon or chrysalis) stage lasts from ten days to eight months, depending on the species (this is where the patience comes in). You can move the pupae to a cage at this point - a cylinder of wire screen or one-quarter-ince hardware cloth upended on a paper plate with another paper plate for a top. Put a layer of peat moss or soil at the bottom, and spray the chrysalis from time to time with water to keep it from drying out (don't soak it).

Watch for movement and change in the appearance of the cocoon, because the hatching process can be quite short. Don't interfere. Although it may pull itself from the cocoon in only a few minutes, the emerging butterfly needs time to pump air and blood through its body and wings, and its outer skeleton needs to harden. The butterfly is usually ready to fly in about half an hour.

Gardeners helping other gardeners


[ Home page][ The Garden Helper][ Site index]
[
Plants by common terms][ Plants by botanical terms][ 'How to' Gardening guides][ Monthly reminders]
[ Free Screensavers][ Animations and Graphics][ Nature Photos]
[
Gardeners Forum][ Gardening Glossary][Link to the Garden Helper]

Have a great gardening day!

Google The Garden Helper
  Web TheGardenHelper.com   

[butterflies]