Categories

Beauty and Fashion

Careers Business Money

Family and Parenting

Food and Entertaining

Health Mind and Body

Home and Garden

Relationships

Shopping
Search



Advanced Search

Article Options
Popular Articles
  1. The Life of a Brokeback Wife - An Inside Look at Same Sex Infidelity
  2. Hosting A Dinner? Party Hire A Personal Chef!
  3. Simple Things You Can Do To Put The Spark Back In Your Relationship
  4. Any Time Home Facials by Sharon Hopkins
  5. Achieving Orgasm: Getting the Most out of it by Candis Hale
No popular articles found.
Popular Authors
  1. Sharon Hopkins
  2. Ruth Houston
  3. Stan Popovich
  4. Geoffrey Cook
  5. Daphne Succes
  6. Dr Tony Fiore
  7. Esther R. Kane
  8. Sherrie Le Masurier
  9. Bridget P. Allen
  10. Ray Randall
No popular authors found.
 »  Home  »  Home and Garden  »  Gardening  »  Easy Butterfly Gardening: Three Tips for Success

Easy Butterfly Gardening: Three Tips for Success
By Doug Green | Published  07/22/2006 | Gardening |
Easy Butterfly Gardening: Three Tips for Success

Butterfly gardens require several things to be successful: plants, water, and the right gardening attitude.

We can easily create lists of plants that butterflies love. Consider planting Asters, Joe-Pye weed, Black-eyed Susans, Lantana, Butterfly Bush, Butterfly Weed, Liatris, Pentas, Coreopsis and Purple Coneflowers. These are gorgeous plants and butterflies will flock to them in large numbers.

Gardeners can easily provide water by soaking the ground in an area next to favourite plants or by having small dishes/birdbaths with water in the garden. By providing water, you?ll attract butterflies. If you have a small pond, lay a stick on the edge so one end is in the water and one end on the shore. This will provide an easy entranceway for both butterflies and frogs. It also looks more realistic than bare edged ponds.

And finally, we need to create a gardening attitude that says that in order to get those gorgeous butterflies, we need to feed the caterpillars that hatch out to be butterflies. It is OK to plant specific plants these immature insects require and it is OK if they chew them up. You have to have food in your garden for all phases of this creature if you want to attract them. The tip is to plant the following plants at the back of the garden so you wont? see the damage. Plant Wild Asters, Clover, Hollyhocks, Lupines, Mallows, Marigolds, Milkweed, Nettles and Thistles, Parsley, Passionflower (in baskets) Plantain, Snapdragons, Sorrel, Turtlehead and Violets.


Women's articles, information - Womens411.com
Doug Green
Doug Green, an award winning garden author with 7 published books answers gardening questions in his free newsletter at http://www.gardening-tips-perennials.com

View all articles by Doug Green