March 23, 2009
Creating a Butterfly Garden
What is butterfly gardening? Simply put butterfly gardening is the art of growing flowers and plants that will attract these colorful and dainty creatures to your garden.
Delight your family and visitors with beautiful butterflies, but be sure to create a safe habitat for them. If you own cats rethink your plans, because it would be a shame to attract these lovely insects to their death.
The design your butterfly garden is a matter of personal preference. Typical points to consider are the size of your garden and the types of flowers and plants you want to grow. Pick a style of garden that appeals to you, but ensure it also contains the plants and flowers that appeal to the butterflies you wish to attract.
It is important to find out which plants and flowers will attract the species of butterflies that live in your area. This information can be found at the local library or on the Internet.
To create the kind of environment that they find attractive, you will also need water of some kind. A birdbath will look attractive and keep the butterflies up off the ground, away from stray cats or mischievous puppies. A shallow dish on a post or hung in a tree will do just as well.
When planting your butterfly garden be careful how you coordinate the colors you choose for your flowerbeds. Although butterflies do not care about your choice of color, you do not want your garden to be a hodgepodge of unrelated colors and textures.
Butterflies are attracted to those flowers that have nectar rather than pollen, like honeysuckle, milkweed, summer lilac, Valerian, daisies, Purple Coneflower, Yellow Sage, day lilies and lavender.
Some people find it helpful to draw and color a layout of their butterfly gardening plan to see what the finished product would look like.
Keep in mind that warm colors like red and orange are flashy and showy. These colors have a greater impact against a strong green background. Cool colors such as blue and purple are soothing and toned down and would work better with a white contrast to create the look of freshness and brightness.
Creating a butterfly garden, even if it is just one corner of your yard, adds beauty for you to enjoy and provides food for the butterflies in your area.
Tags: Butterfly Garden

Comments
March 23, 2009
Creating a Butterfly Garden | Garden Gab said (pingback):
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April 4, 2009
Dan Thomas said:
Very nice article about butterfly gardening! I am definitely looking forward to the warm weather when I can get outside and work on my butterfly garden. I am growing my flowers indoors right now under fluorescent lights in preparation for a butterfly garden planting this spring. If you are interested, I am blogging the whole process at my website (http://butterflygardenplan.com). I hope your article inspires others to create butterfly gardens! Dan