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How to Attract Butterflies to Your Garden
How to Attract Butterflies  and Hummingbirds

 to Your Garden
courtesy Fix.com and CARE2


Deviating a bit from our usual Backroads fare, we thought you might enjoy something about
enjoying your own backroads backyard…. and attracting lots of butterflies, hummingbirds, etc, as well as beautiful flowers so you don’t have to drive all the way down to Pacific Grove or wherever. You can enjoy them right in your own back yard!
 

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Having a garden is one of life’s greatest pleasures. Tangible benefits can be gained from interacting directly with the natural world, including healing faster after an illness and improving kids’ creativity and learning. Just think about how the scent of an aster or the feel of its petals completely changes your mood! Flowers and other plants are beautiful and inspiring, but what I call the fourth dimension in gardening is even more so. This fourth dimension includes the insects and favorable wildlife that are attracted to your garden. Here, I will talk about butterflies, whose color and life are as beautiful as a wind-blown meadow. How can you welcome these insects into your garden year-round?
Native Plants
First, it’s important to select plants that are native to your region. Butterflies and other insects have evolved with the bloom time and taste of plants they know best. When properly sited, native plants can be easier to maintain. Great sources for native plants can be found via the Pollinator Partnership’s regional guides and at sites like Find Native Plants. Make sure you incorporate host plants for caterpillars – zizia for black swallowtails, milkweed for monarchs, and baptisia for sulphurs. Many native grasses, such as bluestem and sideoats grama, are also host plants, as are trees such as oaks, elms, and willows. Whatever you plant, go for diversity of height, bloom size, and leaf texture – the more diverse your garden, the more life it will support from egg to wing. And, it so happens that hummingbirds tend to like a lot of the same flowers as butteflies
Gardening for Butterflies: Top Ten Plants for Attracting Butterflies
Source: Fix.com

Long Live the Monarch

All butterflies are beautiful, but if your heart lies with the royals, you may wish to attract monarch butterflies above all others. In that case, you must plant milkweed. Monarchs need milkweed to survive because it hosts much of their lifecycle.
Monarchs lay their eggs on the underside of the milkweed’s young leaves in the spring/summer. The eggs hatch into caterpillars, known as larvae, and feed on the milkweed through the five stages of their growth.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/how-to-attract-butterflies-to-your-garden.html#ixzz3YFjOtS2h

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