The
best nectar plants also have the advantage of being tough easy-growing
natives; butterfly weed, purple
coneflower, black-eyed
Susan, liatris,
coreopsis,
aster
and Joe-Pye
weed. Annuals
like penta
and lantana
can attract butterflies, even in small container gardens. Add the obvious:
butterfly
bush, and you have a butterfly banquet! But the list doesn't stop
there by any means.
There is
a dark side to butterfly gardening. You've probably all been there; watching
a striped caterpillar devour your dill, a green worm coveting your cabbage.
Providing larval food plants is another part of butterfly gardening if
you want.
Some butterflies
prefer rotted fruit or carrion. That explains the ones feasting off black
bananas in my compost pile.
Butterflies
fly best at a body temp of 85-100 degrees, so the butterfly plantings
should have a sunny location. Rocks, reflective surfaces and evergreens
give butterflies places for basking, important for raising and maintaining
that temperature. Males use mud as a source of minerals and salts, this
is called puddling.
Any pesticides
used in the garden will reduce butterfly numbers. They should be used,
as always, with care and caution only when needed. Consider alternative
controls for insect pests.
Following
these guidelines should not only attract butterflies to your garden but
in turn produce more butterflies for the future.
********************
Rhonda Fleming Hayes is a Master Gardener and contributing writer for Nature Hills Nursery. A native Californian, she has been gardening in some form or fashion since she was a child. Rhonda now writes and gardens in Kansas.
Searing heat, bitter winds and the occasional tornado just make her a smarter gardener. Borrowing from the New York, New York song; she claims if you can garden in Kansas, you can garden anywhere!
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