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Showing posts with label plants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plants. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Butterfly Gardening

A butterfly garden can be as simple or elaborate as you want to make it. Size or complexity will not bring success or failure. Good planning and research play heavily in determining the number and species of butterflies you attract to your garden.

Start with selecting a butterfly field guide specific to your geographic region. Your geographic region if you lived in North America could be, for instance, the United States or Canada. Confining your search to within a specific state or province would be a better choice, increasing your chances for success. Pay particular attention to species requirements for both nectar and host plants. Planting you garden with only nectar-rich plants will definitely attract butterflies. Adding host plants to your plan will provide you with a peak into the entire lifecycle of butterflies.

Choose plants from the list that you, as well as the butterflies, are attracted to. If you don’t like the flowers you have selected, even though the butterflies do, chances are you won’t spend much time in your garden. Plan on cutting some of the flowers. There are plenty to go around, and it in a good way to ensure continuous flowering over the blooming season.

An ideal location for your butterfly garden is in an area that receives at least six hours of full sunlight daily. This is generally listed as one of the requirements for most annuals and perennials that butterflies prefer as a nectar source. The butterflies also favor sunny locations. Please don’t be discouraged if your garden does not meet this requirement. I have personally found that success is possible with as little as two hours of direct sunlight a day.

Consider cultural requirements of the plants you select. Having your soil tested is a great way to determine if you can meet them. Adequately preparing you soil and adding the prescribed elements will be well worth the effort. Native wildflowers, or cultivars of the native species don’t require a lot of special care if you have properly prepared your soil. Seldom bothered by pests or diseases, they are an excellent choice for your garden.

If you make an effort to attract beautiful butterflies to your garden, then please don’t poison them with pesticides. A weed is merely an unwanted flower. Try pulling them by hand. What better excuse for spending more time in the garden. Insect pests seldom pick on healthy plants. Keep yours that way by picking up plant litter on a regular basis. Water your garden only when flowers and plants are showing signs of stress. Over watering causes many plant diseases, and it is not good for the plant’s root system. The rest is out of your control so leave it to the birds and beneficial insects to rid your garden of unwanted pests.

Consider adding a birdbath or butterfly hibernation box to your butterfly garden. These are additions that are both useful and pleasing to the eye. Butterflies need water, especially on hot summer days. A flat rock placed in the middle of a birdbath gives butterflies a place to drink. Hibernation boxes provide some shelter from the elements even though very few species of butterflies actually hibernate. Popular also among butterflies are large, dark, flat rocks placed about the garden for sunning.

All else is up to the garden’s creator. One last word “take time to smell the flowers”. Enjoy your garden and get the camera!

For a list of plants that are easy to grow and care for that you can include in your butterfly garden Click Here!


This article was taken from http://www.backyardwildlifehabitat.info/butterflygardening.htm

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Clean It Up!


You don't have to wait for a volunteer opportunity to take charge and clean up! If you live in an area like I do that is full of lakes, ponds, and even retention ponds you will tend to find trash littering the water ways. I find it very sad that some of the people visiting these areas can't or wont clean up after themselves.

So I tend to take it upon myself to bring a couple of trash bags with me when I go fishing or just sunning by one of our bodies of water. I even take them to the beach as well, so that I can help clean up a bit. I really can't enjoy my day with the trash polluting the natural beauty.

There are many reasons it's important to keep water ways clean. The most obvious is looks, but looks only scratch the surface of the problems pollution causes. Pollution changes the quality of the water which cause changes the structure of that areas eco system. Which will eventually results in the death of some of the local wildlife and plant life resulting in the loss of crucial food supplies for the local wildlife that depends on certain plants and wildlife.

Another major problem pollution to water ways cause is wildlife eating the trash. Ingesting trash such as plastic bags can cause choking, blockage of the digestive system, or toxic poisoning. It's not just trash bags that cause problems another item that causes a lot of problems with birds especially are those plastic rings that hold cans together. They get tangled around the birds neck and slowly strangle them.

Toxic poisoning is a big problem where chemicals such as mercury are dumped into water ways. The mercury doesn't just cause toxic poisoning but it also causes birth defects. It also makes fish toxic for us to eat as well as local wildlife.

So next time your out remember to clean it up! It's not just for you but it's also for the ones that can't tell us what is wrong.