A few years back I planted a small garden outside my back door. I wanted to add summer color to the native chokecherry and serviceberry bushes that grow at the property’s edge. To my delight, I inadvertently started a butterfly garden.
I notice butterflies
when hiking in the high country. They
flutter about in a variety of colors and sizes, stopping briefly here and
there, flying off before I get a good look at them. Sometimes I see them congregating on the
ground around a mud puddle. Research
tells me these are mostly males, likely getting nutrition from dissolved
minerals. One can learn to identify
butterflies by noting size, color and pattern, and flight behavior, but to
date, I can only easily recognize swallowtails and cabbage moths.
This year I find I am hosting a new butterfly, a fritillary perhaps? (see photo)
These visitors arrived in my garden in August when the nonnative purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) and a native aster started blooming. They appear to ignore other flowers nearby – black eyed susans, jupiter’s beard, cosmos, even the native bee balm. They perch on the tall coneflowers when the sun is shining and linger, mostly one to a flower but sometimes sharing the bloom with another butterfly or even a bee. They hang on when the wind gusts, rocking back and forth, finishing their meal before moving on.
Well planned butterfly
gardens have host plants that provide food for caterpillars and nectar plants
for adult butterflies. They have sunny
spots sheltered from the wind, and accessible water. A garden with masses of flowers that bloom in
sequence is ideal. CSU Extension’s “Attracting Butterflies to the Garden” has
more details. (https://extension.colostate.edu/docs/pubs/insect/05504.pdf)
My garden is not
well planned, but it appears to have matured enough to provide the right
environment for these butterflies. They
may like the untended surrounding area that has plenty of shelter and “undesirable”
plants like dandelions and clover. Or perhaps
the small drip irrigation system installed last summer brought the butterflies. Given regular water, all the plants have
grown thicker and taller, with bigger and longer lasting blooms.
Watching butterflies lingering in my flowerbed is a treat! With more research and a bit of work, I hope to attract more butterflies to my garden next year.
Vicky Barney gardens for wildlife and is a member of the Master Gardener Class of 2011
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