Butterfly Gardening

Many Pagans consider nature to be sacred and enjoy inviting the wild creatures of our neighborhood to share our gardens with us. A butterfly garden is an excellent way to do this. With just a little extra work and consideration in the selection of your plants, you can create a haven for butterflies that will also attract bees, birds and many other delightful creatures. Their energy will in turn transform your garden into a delightful haven that brings comfort to you and anyone else who spends time in it.

Select a spot for your garden that is sunny, but sheltered from the wind. The garden should get 5-6 hours of sunlight per day. Butterflies like to be in the warm sun, but don’t like to fight winds. Butterflies are cold-blooded creatures and need to regulate their body temperature externally. Thus, it is helpful to provide a few flat rocks in sunny places for the butterflies to rest on and sun themselves.

If you use pesticides in your garden, you will kill the butterflies and caterpillars, it’s as simple as that. Resist the urge and go organic. It’s better for you in the long run. If the caterpillars are eating your favorite plant, plant more! Or you could look into a book on the subject and find another plant the caterpillars will eat and move them.

Butterflies, like everybody, need to drink. You can provide a water source for them by keeping a shallow mudpuddle moist, maintaining a shallow fountain, or just putting out a little dish with water in it for them. The key word here is shallow. I’ve lost caterpillars to drowning in empty pots that I let fill up with rain water. It was very sad.

Some people like to put out butterfly feeders. This is really not necessary, but it can be fun, and it doesn’t hurt anything. The best thing to use in the feeders is just plain old sugar water and the best feeder I’ve seen was an inverted frizbee with a little sugar water inside. Setting out pieces of overripe fruit, such as apple, banana and citrus fruit, will also help keep your butterflies happy.

Butterfly houses will give your butterflies a safe place to hide out of reach of predators. You can find a nice wooden house and a alot more information about butterflies at many gardening centers. They are also reasonably easy to make.

Inviting butterflies to your garden can mean caterpillars, so be prepared to share. Plant a variety of plants that caterpillars like to encourage them not to eat all your treasured herbs. Soon, you’ll have a new batch of butterflies to enjoy!

Some plants that caterpillars eat are:

Parsley, Dill, Milkweed, Fennel, Hackberry, violets, Clover, Snapdragons, Queen Anne’s Lace, joe-pye-weed, Peas, Fruit Trees, alfalfa and more

Adult butterflies eat nectar, for the most part, so you’ll want to fill your garden with long-blooming, fragrant flowers. When planting flowers to attract butterflies, you’ll want to plant flowers with varying blooming times to keep the butterflies attracted all season long.

If you have limited space and/or experience, a good, simple combination for a starter garden that pleases both adult butterflies and their larvae is – Buddleia, violets, verbena, parsley, [[[dill]], fennel, milkweed, [[coneflower]]], lantana, cosmos, and zinnias. You can expand your garden as the years go by and you get more experienced and adventurous.

If you would like to invite specific types of butterflies to your garden, select your plants with those species in mind.

Types of butterflies and their preferences-

American Snout
Larva- Hackberry
Adult- Aster, Dogbane, dogwood, goldenrod, pepperbush

Anise Swallowtail
Larva- Queen Anne’s Lace
Adult- Buddleia, joe-pye-weed

Baltimore Checkerspot
Larva- Turtlehead, false foxglove, plantain
Adult- Milkweed, Vibernum, Wild rose

Black Swallowtail
Larva- Parsley, Dill, Fennel
Adult- Aster, Buddleia, joe-pye-weed, alfalfa

Buckeye Butterfly
Larva- Snapdragon, loosestrife
Adult- Aster, Milkweed, chickory, coreopsis, carpetweed

Clouded Sulphur
Larva- Clover
Adult- Goldenrod, Grape Hyacinth, Marigold

Cloudless Sulphur
Larva- Cassia, apple, Clover
Adult- Zinnia, Butterfly bush, cosmos, cushion mum

Comma
Larva- Nettle, Elm, Hops
Adult- Rotting fruit & sap, butterfly bush, dandelion

Common Checkered Skipper
Larva- Mallow, hollyhock
Adult- Shepherd’s needles, fleabane, aster, red clover

Common Sulphur
Larva- Vetch
Adult- Aster, dogbane, goldenrod

Common Wood Nymph
Larva- Purple top grass
Adult- Purple Coneflower

Eastern Pygmy Blue
Larva- Glasswort
Adult- Salt Bush

Eastern Tailed Blue
Larva- Clover, peas
Adult- Dogbane

Falcate Orangetip
Larva- Rock cress, mustard
Adult- Mustard, Strawberry, chickweed, violet

Great Swallowtail
Larva- Citrus trees, prickly ash
Adult- lantana, japanese honeysuckle, milkweed, lilac, goldenrod, azalea, Joe Pye Weed, Buddleia

Gorgone Checkerspot
Larva- Sunflower
Adult- Sunflower, goldenrod

Gray Hair Streak
Larva- Mallow, Hollyhock, Clover, Alfalfa
Adult- Thistle, ice plant

Great Spangled Fritillary
Larva- violet
Adult- Ironweed, milkweed, black-eyed susan, verbena, thistle

Gulf Fritillary
Larva- Pentas, Passion Vine
Adult- Joe Pye Weed

Hackberry Emperor
Larva- Hackberry
Adult- Sap, rotting fruit, carrion, dung

Little Glassywing
Larva- Purpletop Grass
Adult- Dogbane, zinnia

Little Yellow
Larva- Cassia, clover
Adult- Clover

Monarch
Larva- milkweed
Adult- milkweed, butterfly bush, goldenrod, thistle, ironweed, mints, dogbane, buddleia

Mourning Cloak
Larva- willow, elm, poplar, aspen, birch, hackberry, wild rose, nettle
Adult- Rotting fruit & sap, butterfly bush, milkweed, shasta daisy, dogbane

Orange Sulphur
Larva- Vetch, alfalfa, clover
Adult- Alfalfa, Aster, Clover, Verbena

Orange-barred Sulphur
Larva- Cassia
Adult- Many plants

Painted Lady
Larva- daisy, hollyhock, Everlasting, Burdock
Adult- Goldenrod, aster, zinnia, butterfly bush, milkweed, dogbane, mallow, privet, vetch

Pearl Crescent
Larva- Aster
Adult- Dogbane

Pipevine Swallowtail
Larva- Dutchman’s pipe, pipevine
Adult- Buddleia

Polydamus Swallowtail
Larva- Pipevine
Adult- Buddleia

Queen
Larva- Milkweed
Adult- Milkweed, beggar-tick, daisy

Question Mark
Larva- Hackberry, Elm, Nettle, Basswood
Adult- Aster, Milkweed, Sweet Pepperbush

Red Admiral
Larva- nettle
Adult- rotting fruit and sap, daisy, aster, goldenrod, butterfly bush, milkweed, stonecrop, clover, dandelion, goldenrod, mallow

Red-spotted Purple
Larva- Black cherry, willow, poplar
Adult- Privet, poplar

Silver Spotted Skipper
Larva- Black locust, wisteria
Adult- Dogbane, privet, clover, thistle, winter cress

Silvery Checkerspot
Larva- Sunflower
Adult- Cosmos, blanket flower, phlox, zinnia, marigold

Sleepy Orange
Larva- Cassia, Clover
Adult- Blue Porter, Beggar tick, aster

Spicebush Swallowtail
Larva- Spicebush, Sassafrass
Adult- Dogbane, joe-pye-weed, Buddleia

Spring Azure
Larva- Dogwood, Vibernum, Blueberry, Spirea, apple
Adult- blackberry, cherry, dogwood, forgetmenot, holly

Tawny Emperor
Larva- Hackberry
Adult- Tree sap, rotting fruit, carrion

Tiger Swallowtail
Larva- cherry, ash, birch, tulip tree, lilac, willow
Adult- Butterfly bush, milkweed, Japanese honeysuckle, phlox, lilac, ironweed, joe pye weed, buddleia

Varigated Fritillary
Larva- violet, passion vine
Adult- joe-pye-weed

Viceroy
Larva- willow, poplar, fruit trees
Adult- rotting fruit, sap, aster, goldenrod, milkweed, thistle, beggar-tick

Western Tailed Blue
Larva- Clover, peas
Adult- Legumes

White Admiral
Larva- Birch, Willow, poplar, honeysuckle
Adult- aphid honeydew, bramble blossom

Zabulon Skipper
Larva- Purpletop grass
Adult- blackberry, vetch, milkweed, buttonbush, thistle

Zebra Longwing
Larva- passion-vine
Adult- Verbena, Lantana, shepherd’s needle

Zebra Swallowtail
Larva- Pawpaw
Adult- Dogbane, joe-pye-weed, buddleia, privet, blackberry

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