Showing posts with label butterfly bush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butterfly bush. Show all posts

Looking back to warmer days

I don't know if it got as cold as they said it would last night, but this morning when I checked it was 0ºF (-18ºC), which is cold enough. In fact, I'm not in the mood to show you anything wintery today, so I decided to look back into my pre-blog photo archives to find...


...butterflies! Apparently July 2007 was a very good year for butterflies in my garden, or at least I was out there enough that I captured lots of photos. The black swallowtail is the one that I see most, so that's what I started with here.

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Another walkway update

I look at it all day long through the window, so I don't really get a good sense of how the walkway garden is doing. Sure I see blooms come and go, but I don't notice if specific plants are doing well or not. Are they growing?


So let's take a look at it today!

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Purple

Time to notice some of the color in the garden, mainly from the blooms. Yes, green abounds here, but it's the canvas for the daubs of pigment that the flowers provide.


Today's color is "purple", but think of it as a bit broader than that, encompassing lavenders and pinks too.

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Walkway plants, north side

My recent walkway project ended for this year once I got all of the perennials planted. It's time to show you what plants I put here to give the area not only instant impact, but to ensure that it becomes a real thing of beauty and interest in future years.


Today I'll focus on the north side of the walkway, which is on your left as you walk up to the house.

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two harvests, in a way

As summer ends, the time for fall harvests quickly approaches. I wouldn't say that I have "crops" to harvest, as my garden isn't large enough to qualify for that. I do have plants that are producing though, like it or not. I'll take a look at two today -- think of it as fall garden preseason.


The first is a plant that I never want to produce anything but blooms: the Buddleia or "butterfly bushes".

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Butterfly Bush

When I was a child, long, long before I was ever interested in plants I remember seeing a plant catalog that my parents received. It probably came in the Sunday paper and was mixed in with the comics and other color-printed flyers -- I can't think of any other reason that I would have seen it. It was one of those lower-quality printings, with over-saturated photographs and illustrations of many of the plants. The only plant I remember seeing from this catalog was a "butterfly bush". I can't be certain of the exact wording, but it said something like "produces big, fragrant blooms all summer long, attracting butterflies from all over the neighborhood". It sounded too good to be true to me, and why didn't they have a photograph of this amazing plant?


Decades passed and one of the first plants I ever bought for my garden was a "butterfly bush", or Buddleia davidii. I have to say, that ad from long ago was right!

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This is not a native plant, but the butterflies simply adore it. There aren't many of them flying around right now -- their time is later in the summer -- but these blooms are still so wonderful to have around.



So fragrant... a sweet scent, not overpowering though.

I breath deeply of this plant whenever I walk past.

I have two named cultivars: 'Pink Delight' and 'Dark Knight', and also some seedlings that are either more like the species, or some cross between my two varieties.



This seedling has huge flower spikes, almost 24" (60 cm) long:


I often think about getting a white variety, or one of the yellow ones. It seems wrong to buy another one of these though, since I always have seedlings available. They also propagate very easily from cuttings.

Lots of different insects love these flowers, not just the butterflies. I often find bees that have spent the night in the blooms:



Also some not-very-welcome visitors (Japanese beetles):


Lots of tiny insects too:


It's because of these little guys that I release several baby mantises on these shrubs each year:




The flowers fade after a couple of days, but I remove the faded blooms every week or two to keep the blooms coming and the reduce the number of volunteers I have popping up everywhere. These things will produce tons of seeds if you let them!


The blooms that come later in the summer are smaller, but there are more of them.


I cut my butterfly bushes down to the ground late every winter, so I don't end up with huge, woody messes -- I get all new wood, plenty of blooms, and shrubs of manageable size. They still reach 7' (2m) or so tall, but that's perfect for me.



And this plant is perfect for my garden!

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Magical, Black, Butterfly

I have a fascination with the flying nectar-drinkers in my garden. Bees, hummingbirds, butterflies, moths -- I could watch them for hours (if I had that kind of time). Even with my tight schedule I find myself watching them feeding whenever I can, and ten minutes watching the same insect do the same thing over and over again is not unusual. Nor is it ever boring for me.


Although bees and hummingbirds are plentiful in my garden right now, butterflies have a special attraction at this time of year. Maybe it's the way they float silently around the flowers, leaving but then immediately returning to noiselessly taste nectar, just inches from my eyes. They're like magic with wings.

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Butterfly

Some days you just need to see butterflies. This is one of those days.


So here are several photos of a male Eastern Tiger Swallowtail butterfly or two. There were three swallowtail butterflies around at one point, so I'm not completely certain that all of these photos are of the same guy. I think so though (with one noted exception).

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More butterflies

I've been keeping an eye on the butterflies moving through the yard, in the hopes of seeing something unique, or not as common. I'm grateful for every butterfly that appears, but there are some that are more exciting than others. Not that anything in my yard is very rare, but if it's not something I regularly see (or some species I haven't been seeing for weeks already), I grab the camera!


Then it's usually a lot of snapping and deleting of photos, since butterflies don't typically like to sit still -- some species seem to, but most pretty much just want to dart around. That is unless you catch them early enough in the day that they're still getting warmed by the sun, so they're more sluggish and will sit still a little bit longer. Plus they will open their wings more to provide more surface area for the sunlight to heat.


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Morning blooms

As I promised, to help balance out all of the "creepy" posts about insects and spiders I've been doing lately, here's a look at some of the late summer flowers that are in bloom in my garden. It's really important to make sure you have plants that make the end of summer and start of autumn interesting. Although it's great having flowers all over the place in May and June, it's also pretty easy as most plants seem to want to bloom then. It's a little trickier to ensure you're looking at blooms now (in early September), but it's really worth the effort.


It really just comes down to having some plants around that flower late. In the spring when you're shopping for plants (most people get the majority of their plants in the spring -- only those really addicted to gardening will visit the nurseries all season long, right?) these late bloomers are the really boring ones, as they don't have any blooms or even buds to entice you to buy. They're all foliage and promises.

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Time for some butterflies

Besides being hummingbird season, this time of year is also the best for butterflies in my yard. The butterfly bushes earn their keep and attract all sorts of the beauties. I'd like to take a look at some of them right now.


Since the types of butterflies that I see changes almost every day, with some species only stopping by very rarely, the images here don't represent the only types of butterflies that I see -- they're just what I've seen recently.


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Butterfly Bush Beautification

I've got several butterfly bushes in my garden. I have more this year than I did last year. I didn't buy any new ones this year -- they were volunteer seedlings. This can be a problem.


Yes, they're nice plants with beautiful, sweet-smelling blooms, but they produce seed. Lots of seed. They grow almost anywhere, especially in the cracks of my flagstone patio. I do not need shrubs growing in the middle of my patio.


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Nothing in particular

This morning was hot. Way too hot and humid to do anything in the garden except walk around looking at everything. Even that wasn't too much fun, as the sweat was soon getting in my eyes making it difficult to use the camera.


I persisted, but this post will be a series of unconnected images... not quite random, but no real purpose to it. You must have days in the garden like that, right? It can't be all work and structured time -- you need to be able to flit from one plant or bed to another on a whim, watching whatever catches your eye. That's how I feel today.

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Cleanup: Too Cold!

After a Friday that was sunny and warm (almost 70ºF), it really was not good weather Saturday. Cloudy, cold, windy, and sprinkling rain every once in a while -- not the kind of day that I want to spend in the garden. But work was getting frustrating, and there's a lot left to do out there, so I decided to spend a couple more hours on cleanup. I noticed that the butterfly bushes were starting to leaf out, and some of the perennials are really starting to emerge, so I'll start with those.


The green you might be able to see under all of that brown is oregano, with some old Spanish Flag vines on top. The butterfly bush is in the background (out of focus).


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