How to Plant a Beautiful Butterfly Flower Garden

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My wife and I just can’t get enough of our flower garden, it brings so much joy just looking at them. Sometimes I find myself just staring out my office window into the backyard as it can be quite beautiful.
But, it really got interesting when our plants’ flower blossoms started attracting butterflies. I even bought a new digital camera so I could catch all the beauty to share on my gardening blogs.
Of course, it helps if you can actually see the flowers in your garden! Usually, that means putting the tall flowers at the back and the shorter plants at the front. But does that rule always hold true?
We offer a couple of suggestions that break the rules.
One of those tips involves planting flowers around rocks but you could also use stepping stones. Our stepping stone molds will give your garden a truly unique look… and give your flowers a background to help them stand out. Read it all here…
How To Turn Your Flower Garden Into A Butterfly Heaven
We like to think that our flower seeds will give your garden all the beauty it needs. With a little attention, they can do even more than that. The flowers can also attract butterflies, bringing additional color to your outdoor areas.
Our zinnias, for example, create nectar that’s a treat for the Silver Checkerspot, a yellow-orange butterfly found in most eastern and central states between May and September. Our purple coneflowers are popular with Common Wood-Nymphs and Monarch, and shasta daisies provide a meal for the Mourning Cloak, a beautiful purple-black butterfly that appears across almost the entire country.
You shouldn’t really need to do anything special to turn your flower garden into a butterfly paradise but a little planning can increase the numbers of butterflies that you attract — and the amount that you enjoy them.
Planting particular types of flowers in large groups, for example, will make them easier for butterflies to spot and give you fluttering clusters instead of migrating individuals that come in ones and twos. Creating areas of light and shade will let the butterflies both warm themselves in the sun and provide cool spots out of the heat. And puddles of water and rotting fruit can also give your butterflies a reason to stick around… provided you don’t mind the smell.
You can also try matching the plant favored by the larvae with the flower preferred by the butterfly. Place sunflowers near zinnias, for example, and you’ll create a nursery for the Silvery Checkerspots, guaranteeing a supply when the caterpillars pupate between May and September.
And finally, you can also plan your garden so that you have a spot to sit in the summer shade while the butterflies enjoy the flowers that surround you — and you enjoy both.
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Tagged with: Butterflies • butterfly garden • Butterfly gardening • flower seeds • flowers • garden • gardening
Filed under: backyard garden • gardening tips • new brunswick
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Yes, growing flowers in our garden could enliven our busy and stressful life by their aromatic scents, glow, beauty of color and texture! Add to that – flowers also attract colorful and friendly butterflies too! We can include “flowering gardening” as one of our hobbies. It’s relaxing, contemplating and not costly. Flowers only gives and gives . . . and all we just need is to take them, appreciate them, and flaunt them. We use them in the celebration of our family, friends or even our own birthdays, weddings, thanksgiving , graduation and even funeral service. We bring them to people who are sick. We give them to people we care and love. In our time of joy and sadness, flowers will always be there to enliven us.
Always,
Joy@gardening
http://www.gardening-quick-n-easy.com/flowergardeningtips.html
My wife and I are planning to have a butterfly garden for next year. I am just now learning the plants and care needed to get the butterflies we want and to keep them happy in our yard.