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Butterfly Gardens
Everyone loves butterflies but knowing how to keep and attract them
to your home is really quite easy. There is no minimum size to a
Butterfly garden; they can be as small as a container or window
planter, or as large as your can design and build. What you want to
create is a complete environment that will not only attract
butterflies but will also entice them to lay their eggs; so you will
want plants that caterpillars would love to eat too. In essence, you
will create a complete ecosystem for all stages of their life.
First you will need to do a little research on your
local area as to what butterflies are common, then you can begin
searching for the best nectar and host plants for your butterfly
garden. Monarch butterfly caterpillars like Milkweed, the Common
Snout-Nosed wants hackberries and so it is important to know what
butterflies live where you live. You also should know that what
caterpillars eat is not what a Butterfly gets its nourishment from.
Butterflies drink their food thus they need nectar bearing flowers
and plants which hold water on their leaves. Caterpillars eat
leaves.
The following is a partial list of host plants for
butterfly egg laying and caterpillar food:
Monarch – Milkweed
Swallowtail – parsley, parsnips, carrots, fennel, anise, pipe vine,
snakeroot
Great Southern White – mustard
Zebras, Julia, Gulf Fritillary – passion flower leaves
Greater and Lesser Fritillaries – violets
Comma – nettle and hops
Buckeye – plantain and gerardia
Red Admiral – nettles
Common Blue – dogwood flowers
California Sister – live oak
Fawn – birch and elder
Nectar bearing plants and flowers include the following varieties:
Lantana (full sun)
Zinnias (partial to full sun)
Sage (full sun)
Sunflower (full sun)
Butterfly bush and weeds (partial to full sun)
Bee balm (partial to full sun)
Lilac (partial to full sun)
Marjoram (partial to full sun)
Hebe (partial to full sun)
Pentas (partial to full sun)
Purple Coneflowers (partial to full sun)
Butterflies require sunlight in order to regulate their body
temperature, but just like us humans too much sun can also be
harmful, so any butterfly garden should have both full sunlight and
partial shade to offer the best of everything. As with any garden,
proper soil or bed preparation is important as is adequate nutrients
and water for the plants you select. Also, placement of the plants
in your garden is equally important for their survival. You should
not put plant requiring full sun in the shaded areas and vise-versa.
With the right planning and proper care, you can create a complete
lifecycle environment for your butterflies.
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