Date: Fri 28-Aug-1998
Date: Fri 28-Aug-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: JUDYC
Quick Words:
butterflies-Gardener-Bleach
Full Text:
SUBURBAN GARDENER: Gardens Of Flying Flowers
By Anthony C. Bleach
In a campaign to promote the planting of gardens to help butterflies, this
year has been nominated by the Royal Horticultural Society as "The Year of
Gardens and Butterflies." As well as adding beauty with these "flying
flowers," it is hoped such a promotion will help conserve butterflies by
providing nectar-bearing flowers and caterpillar food-plants.
Marney Hall, a British naturalist, has identified four main requirements -
what she calls the four "Ss" - which a garden needs in order to make it more
attractive to butterflies: Sustenance, Sunshine, Shelter and Structure.
Sustenance is nectar for adults and foliage for caterpillars. I would agree
that the essential plant for any butterfly garden is Buddleia davidii . I have
never seen another plant with seven or more swallowtails on it so often. Its
success is due to the huge volume of nectar it produces.
Runners-up include Sedums, Origanum, Iberis and Erysimum `Bowles' Mauve'
wallflower. It is a mistake to choose intensely hybridized cultivars that
produce little nectar, such as the popular Buddleia `Black Knight.' Wild
plants like bramble, joe-pye weed, boneset and Asclepias species, butterfly
weed are also good lures.
As a general rule, composite (daisy-type) flowers are good for butterflies
because most species have short tongues and cannot reach the nectar in tubular
flowers. To maintain a copious flow of nectar, keep the plants well-watered in
dry weather.
A major objective in planting a butterfly garden is to ensure a supply of
nectar for as long as possible. A variety of plants will provide a range of
flowering times. Towards the end of the year, butterflies about to go into
hibernation will benefit from fall flowering plants such as Asters and Sedums.
The flowering period of the buddleia can be extended by planting several
cultivars, and annuals such as stocks, candy tuft and heliotrope can be sown
at intervals to supply nectar through the summer.
Caterpillar food-plants include milkweeds, aspens, weeping willow, spicebush,
butter-and-eggs and other plants that normally grow on the edges of the woods.
Stinging nettles are a good food source, but they need to be cut at intervals
so that they do not become coarse. They should also have plenty of sun and be
rich in nitrogen. Feed them.
Shelter from wind is needed at all times, and hibernating butterflies need
deeper shelter like tangles of brambles, piles of branches, and tree roots.
The structure of the garden provides the microclimate needed by butterflies.
For instance, the transitional zone between lawn and shrubs or at the edge of
the woods provides shelter.
Butterflies thrive on neglect. Patches of weeds and grasses and untidy corners
help provide butterflies with all that is necessary for their entire life
cycle. Balance this by imposing some order in the garden, placing the plants
in groups rather than scattered around.
Robert Burton's recent article in The Garden was the best source I could find.
Jaret Daniels also has some good ideas in the latest Fine Gardening .
(Anthony C. Bleach coordinates the horticulture degree program at Naugatuck
Valley Community-Technical College in Waterbury.)
