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Host Plants For Butterflies: How To Make A Butterfly Container Garden

butterfly container

Butterflies are a welcome sight in any garden. They will naturally come to feed on many flowering plants, but by setting out the right flowers in the right style, you can make a butterfly container garden to attract them in droves straight to your patio, window, or anywhere you can fit a container. Keep reading to learn about creating butterfly container gardens.

Butterfly Container Garden Ideas

One of the most important things to think about is choosing the right plants. If you really want to create a butterfly haven, you should arrange a mix of host plants and nectar plants. For butterflies, nectar is a prime food source.

 

Nectar Plants for Butterflies

Flowers that are especially nectar-rich feature big bloom clusters like the following:

  • Mums
  • Yarrow
  • Butterfly weed
  • Coneflowers

These big, open nectar sources are easily accessible to butterflies’ proboscises. Different species of butterflies are able to feed better off of different flowers, though, so plant a variety of nectar plants for butterflies of many varieties.

Host Plants for Butterflies

Host plants for butterflies are not essential, but they’re a great idea. Plant some milkweed, aster, and rose mallow to create a space for mother butterflies to lay their eggs and baby caterpillars to feed. These plants might not be much to look at, but they will encourage much more butterfly activity and might just allow you to witness the making of a chrysalis and emergence of a new butterfly or two.

Tips for Creating Butterfly Container Gardens

Butterflies love sun, so you should make a butterfly container garden in an area that receives at least six hours of sun a day. They have a hard time battling wind though, so make sure your sunny place is protected. Give them a flat, light-colored surface, like a stone, where they can bask in the sun.

Give your butterflies a ready water source by placing a plant saucer full of moistened sand among the plants. They don’t need much water, and the sand will help to keep it from evaporating.

Different species of butterflies like to feed from plants of different heights. To ensure a large number of butterflies, put out a wide variety. You can fill a single large container with tall, vertical-growing plants in the back, shorter plants in the middle, and long, trailing plants draped over the side – or simply mimic the thriller, filler spiller effect.

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