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CREATING
THE RIGHT SPOT
Any place where flowers grow can be a butterfly garden. Whether
you're rethinking an existing garden, putting in a new flower bed
or planting in containers for the deck of your condo, you can create
a welcoming environment for nature's winged jewels.
All butterflies,
from the exotic morphos you'll see at Foremost's Butterflies Are
Blooming exhibit to the common cabbage butterflies that flit along
the roadsides all summer, have four simple requirements:
SUN
Beautiful as they are, butterflies are cold-blooded insects that
depend on the sun for warmth. Ideally, a butterfly garden should
have large, open sunny spaces full of sun-loving, blossoming plants
that are good nectar sources. But if you can't offer butterflies
a big, sunny location, make the most of what you have. If your garden
tends to be shady, plant a few nectar-source plants in the sunniest
spot. On decks or balconies, place flower pots and window boxes
where they'll get plenty of sunlight, and fill them with flowers
that are butterfly favorites.
Butterflies
fly best when their body temperature is between 85 and 100 degrees
Fahrenheit. To reach this temperature they will often pause on rocks
or paved areas to sun themselves. To help them out, place a few
large rocks in a part of the garden that gets early-morning sun.
Butterflies will quickly discover that this is a great spot for
warming themselves.
SHELTER
Butterflies need shelter from the wind, rain and predators. While
you can't keep the weather or birds out of your garden, you can
offer butterflies some help.
Shrubby nectar
and larval food plants such as buddleia, spice bush, lilac and wild
cherry can help shelter a butterfly garden from the wind while offering
butterflies a source of sustenance. A small fence, a row of evergreens
or a large rock can also provide shelter from the wind. You can
also locate your butterfly plants where your house will block prevailing
breezes.
In rainstorms
and to escape hungry birds butterflies will typically take shelter
by perching on the underside of a leaf or the branch of a shrub.
You can also purchase or make a butterfly house, a wooden box with
several slotted openings where butterflies can hide from predators
or take shelter at night or during inclement weather, resting until
the coast is clear or until the return of the sun warms the box
and its inhabitants.
FOOD
Adult butterflies have simple lives: they mate, the females lay
eggs, and they spend the rest of their time drinking nectar. Consequently
the rule about nectar-bearing plants and butterflies is equally
simple: if you plant them, they will come.
Butterflies
come to a wide range of flowers, from towering old lilacs to dainty
carpets of freshly-planted alyssum. Check out the list of nectar
sources to get some ideas for your garden. It may also be worthwhile
to visit your favorite nursery or public garden and spend some time
taking note of the plants that are visited by butterflies. Make
sure you invest in a variety of plants with a broad range of blooming
periods. For example, you could lure butterflies with aubrietia
in the spring, verbena at midsummer, sedum in the fall and impatiens
all through the growing season.
Nectar attracts not only butterflies, but bees. When you're out
enjoying your garden, negotiate your way carefully among the fluttering
and buzzing.
Don't forget
the youngsters --- the caterpillars that will eventually become
butterflies. By making room for larval food plants in your garden
you'll not only be able to watch females laying their eggs in your
garden, you'll also be supporting the next generation of butterflies.
Each species
of butterfly feeds on specific plants during the larval stage. The
popular Monarch butterfly, for example, lays its eggs on milkweed,
because milkweed leaves are the only food the Monarch caterpillar
will eat. Similarly the Black Swallowtail larvae have an exclusive
relationship with plants from the Parsley family, and the larvae
of the Painted Lady turn up their snouts to anything that isn't
thistle. Take a look at the list of larval
plants for ideas about how to feed caterpillars in your garden.
Remember: larval
plants get eaten. If you have a successful butterfly garden, the
larval food plants in it are going to show the effects of having
been nibbled. You may wish to locate these plants in a fairly inconspicuous
spot.
MOISTURE
Butterflies cannot drink directly from open water, so while they
have no use for your birdbath or pool, they love sandy or muddy
puddles. Replenish puddles frequently during hot weather, or consider
putting out a container of damp sand. Add sugar water to the sand
if you wish. Some butterflies also enjoy drinking nutrient-rich
moisture from rotting fruit or manure, so if you find yourself with
some over-ripened bananas or pears, put them outside in a sunny
spot and see what happens. Give cow dung the same treatment.
PESTICIDES:
DEFINITELY NOT
Pesticides have no place in a butterfly garden. If you're serious
about encouraging butterflies to visit, avoid using pesticides.
Manually remove and destroy any pests that threaten your plants,
or discourage them by dousing them with soapy water. But first,
identify them with the help of a field guide or your local Cooperative
Extension Service. The ugly creatures eating your flowers may just
be butterfly larvae!
With knowledge
about growing plants and effective garden design, you'll soon be
luring beautiful butterflies to your home.
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