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         Butterfly Gardening:     more books (105)
  1. Taylor's Weekend Gardening Guide to Attracting Birds and Butterflies: How to Plant a Backyard Habitat to Attract Hummingbirds and Other Winged Wildlife (Taylor's Weekend Gardening Guides) by Barbara Ellis, 1997-02-03
  2. Butterfly Gardening - How to Encourage Butterflies to Visit and Breed in Your Garden (Gardening with Nature) by Jennifer Lesley Steel, 2003-05-25
  3. Gardening for butterflies in Louisiana: A guide for gardeners, educators, and enthusiasts by Gary Noel Ross, 1994
  4. Gardening to Attract Birds and Butterflies (8-Land 102003) by Saxon Holt, Peggy Henry, 1997-01
  5. Butterfly Gardening: Creating a Butterfly Haven in Your Garden by Thomas C. Emmel Ph.D., 1997-11
  6. Butterfly Gardening and Conservation by Dave Tylka, 1990
  7. Butterfly Gardening: In South Africa by J. Reid, 2000-12-31
  8. Butterfly Gardening by Vera Krischik, 1998-09
  9. Butterfly Pavilion's Butterfly Gardening: A Guide for Colorado Gardeners by Sarada Krishnan, 2003-01
  10. Gardens for Birds, Hummingbirds, & Butterflies (Black & Decker Outdoor Home Series) by Linda D. Harris, 2001-11-01
  11. The Butterfly Garden by Jerry Sedenko, 1993-06-13
  12. Butterflies of Alabama: Glimpses into Their Lives (Gosse Nature Guides) by Paulette Haywood Ogard, Sara Cunningham Bright, 2010-08-29
  13. Grow a Butterfly Garden: Storey Country Wisdom Bulletin A-114 (Storey/Garden Way Publishing Bulletin) by Wendy Potter-Springer, 1990-01-09
  14. Butterfly Gardening Made Easy for Southwest Florida by Mike Malloy, 2006-11-29

21. Butterfly Gardening Welcome To My Website Where You Can Find
List of best butterfly attracting plants, table of which butterflies use which plants, sightings and Category Home Gardens Specialized Techniques Wildlife Butterfly......butterfly gardening. Welcome During my first year of butterfly gardening(1993), I saw 14 butterfly species in the garden. Since
http://pages.prodigy.net/raueri/btrfly.htm
Butterfly Gardening Welcome to my website where you can find information obtained from my garden located in Silver Spring, Maryland, USA (a suburb of Washington, D.C.). I hope you find it useful. If you're interested in watching butterflies, I strongly recommend creating a butterfly garden. During my first year of butterfly gardening (1993), I saw 14 butterfly species in the garden. Since then, I have added many plants to attract butterflies. In 2000, I observed 40 butterfly species (out of a total of 50 seen in the garden since 1993). Creating a butterfly garden also attracts other plants and animals. You don't need to live in the country or next to a natural area to attract butterflies. Small suburban lots with mowed-grass lawns and a few trees and shrubs surround my garden. Rock Creek National Park is about a half-mile away. Eric Raun If you have questions, comments, or suggestions, please contact me at raueri@juno.com

22. SEABA: NABA/SOUTHEAST ARIZONA BUTTERFLY ASSOCIATION
Meetings, field trips, workshops, newsletter, count results, butterfly gardening, projects, checklist, and news.
http://www.naba.org/chapters/nabasa/home.html
A CHAPTER OF NABA
SOUTHEAST ARIZONA BUTTERFLY ASSOCIATION
FOR THE LOVE OF BUTTERFLIES With Arizona's only chapter of NABA, the North American Butterfly Association
Two-tailed Swallowtail Papilio multicaudata (PRB)
THE STATE BUTTERFLY OF ARIZONA SEABA is a local chapter of the North American Butterfly Association ( NABA ), a federally listed tax exempt charitable organization. Our area covers most of Pima, Santa Cruz, Cochise and southern Graham Counties ( the area covered by postal zip codes 856 and 857 ) but as this is one of the prime butterfly spots in the country we have members from all over. Both SEABA and NABA are non-profit organizations formed to promote non-consumptive, recreational butterflying and to increase enjoyment, knowledge and conservation of butterflies. We cater to all aspects of of recreational butterfly appreciation including butterfly gardening, identification, photography, outreach to to local schools and the public, and conservation. Whether you're new to butterflies or an expert, we're a relaxed group of fun-loving butterfly enthusiasts. Our members have all levels of knowledge and experience from beginners to advanced so you don't have to be an expert to join in the fun!

23. Butterfly Gardening
include Whitney Cranshaw and Paul Opler, Colorado State University, for the useof slides from the Colorado State Extension slide set on butterfly gardening.
http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/horticulture/DG6711.html
BU-06711 Reviewed 1998 To Order
Vera Krischik
Table of Contents
Introduction
What a Butterfly Is Life History of a Few Butterflies Behaviors to Watch
  • Feeding
  • Basking
  • Puddling
  • Patrolling and Perching
  • Mating
  • Egg-laying

Creating a Butterfly Garden
  • Host Plants
  • Habitats
  • Reduced Use of Pesticides

Enjoy Your Garden
References and Resources
  • Slide Set
  • Publications
  • Organizations

Table 4: Butterfly and moth garden plants.

Table 5: Checklist of Minnesota Butterflies

Author:

Vera Krichik, Ph.D., is an assistant professor, Department of Entomology and an extension specialist, Minnesota Extension Service. She is also the director of the Center for Urban Ecology and Sustainability, University of Minnesota.
Acknowledgements: The author gratefully acknowledges a grant from the Minnesota Extension Service, which has funded the production of this publication. Also acknowledged is the assistance of and contributions by numerous individuals in the creation of this publication. These include Whitney Cranshaw and Paul Opler, Colorado State University, for the use of slides from the Colorado State Extension slide set on butterfly gardening. Thanks are extended to Kevin Stroom, Robert Wawrzynski, and William Miller, Ph.D., all of the University of Minnesota, for assistance on the manuscript. Thanks also go out to all those who shared their slides of butterflies and plants. Production: Production of this publication was funded by a Minnesota Extension Service grant to the Center for Urban Ecology and Sustainability. Product manager and editor for the Minnesota Extension Service was Larry Etkin, senior editor, Educational Development System. Produced in the Educational Development System, Minnesota Extension Service.

24. Creating A Butterfly Garden
BU06711 Reviewed 1998, To Order. butterfly gardening. Creating a ButterflyGarden. From butterfly gardening by Vera Krischik Host Plants.
http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/horticulture/components/DG6711e.html
BU-06711 Reviewed 1998 To Order
Butterfly Gardening
Creating a Butterfly Garden
From Butterfly Gardening by Vera Krischik
Host Plants
Butterfly gardening involves planning your garden to attract, retain, and encourage butterfly populations. A sample garden plan is shown in Figure 1, and a list of host plants is given in Table 3 and Table 4 . Flowers of similar colors grouped together are more attractive to both butterflies and the gardener. You should select a variety of nectar-producing plants with the aim of providing flowers in bloom throughout the season. This will entice a continuous succession of new visitors to a yard. It is especially important to have flowers in mid to late summer, when most butterflies are active. Flowers with multiple florets that produce abundant nectar are ideal. Annuals are wonderful butterfly plants because they bloom continuously through the season, providing a steady supply of nectar. Perennial plants, such as coneflowers, lilac, butterfly weed, and asters, are visited regularly by butterflies. Most plants in the mint family are also good nectar sources for butterflies. Avoid double flowers because they are often bred for showiness, not nectar production. For successful butterfly gardening, you need to provide food for more than the adult butterflies. You need to provide for their caterpillar forms as well. Butterfly caterpillars have a limited host range (See

25. Butterfly Gardening For Ninnies. And The Horticulturally Challenged...
butterfly gardening for Ninnies. And the horticulturally butterfly gardeningfor Ninnies. And the horticulturally challenged We have modified
http://users.htcomp.net/weis/butterflygarden.html
Butterfly Gardening for Ninnies.
And the horticulturally challenged... "We have modified our environment so radically that we must now modify ourselves to exist in it."
" N. Weinerk" If Your Black Thumb Scale (1-10) = 10:
Plant Lantana
Butterfly Magnet Scale 1-10 = 5-6:
Easy to Grow Scale 1-10 = 10

Images of different lantanas and verbenas

I'm not sure it's POSSIBLE to kill Lantana. If you plant it, it will groooow!
Brazilian Verbena (Verbena bonariensis)
is the butterfly favorite. If unavailable, Blue Princess verbena has been a proven performer in test gardens.
If Your Black Thumb Scale = 9:
Plant Lantana, Parsley, Dill, Fennel, and Brazilian Verbena (Verbena bonariensis) Butterfly Magnet Scale = 8: Easy to Grow Scale = 9-10:
This is better as Dill, Parsley and Fennel feed both butterfly and caterpillar. I'm not sure whether my caterpillars prefer dill or fennel. I do know that I have the most success growing fennel. Christine Scheer ("Butterfly Memoirs," Texas Gardener , May/June 1999, pp 34-36) finds her caterpillars prefer fennel to dill.

26. Butterfly Gardening
Factsheet from Clemson University on designing a home garden to attract butterflies. Includes lists Category Home Gardens Specialized Techniques Wildlife Butterfly......HOME GARDEN INFORMATION CENTER. 1888-656-9988, HGIC 1701, http//hgic.clemson.edu.butterfly gardening. REFERENCES FOR butterfly gardening.
http://hgic.clemson.edu/factsheets/HGIC1701.htm
HGIC 1701 http://hgic.clemson.edu Butterfly Gardening Flying flowers or jewels of the sky are just two of the terms that have been used to describe the beauty and fascination that people have for butterflies. By following a few simple steps, you can attract these flying beauties to your garden. WHY DO BUTTERFLIES VISIT A GARDEN? Butterflies are looking for two things when they enter a garden: nectar , the food that adult butterflies need, and host plants , the place where the female will lay her eggs and the food that caterpillars need. Both are necessary to create a successful butterfly garden. NECTAR PLANT FACTORS Nectar plants These are plants with flowers that produce the sweet fluid that many insects, including butterflies, use as food. Flower colors Many of our native butterflies prefer plants that have pink, red, purple, yellow or orange flowers. Butterflies appear to be attracted to areas with large masses of a single color, or closely related colors, rather than gardens with many colors mixed together. Flower types Most butterflies must land in order to get to the nectar. They prefer plants having either clusters of short tubular flowers, or flowers with large, flat petals.

27. Bgq1
Newsletter for gardeners and butterfly enthusiasts.Category Home Gardens Specialized Techniques Wildlife Butterfly...... Basics of butterfly gardening About Me My Garden Current Year 2002 2001 2000 199899Common North American Butterflies and their host plants Nectar Plants
http://butterflygardeners.com/

This site is hosted by
Netfirms Web Hosting
Butterfly Gardeners' Quarterly A Newsletter for Gardeners and Butterfly Enthusiasts "If You Plant It, They Will Come"

Anise Swallowtail. Photo by Tom Boyden

How would you like to gaze out your kitchen window at colorful Painted Ladies as they sip nectar from a butterfly bush? Or watch dragonflies hover by your garden pond, while iridescent blues flutter on its sandy edge? Maybe you'd like to observe an Anise Swallowtail as it grows from a tiny egg to a fat caterpillar in your fennel patch, and see its magical transformation into a chrysalis and then a butterfly with yellow and black wings. By creating a haven for butterflies in your yard, you can greatly enhance your chances of attracting many colorful visitors like tiger swallowtails and admirals. This can be as simple as adding marigolds and zinnias to a sunny flower bed, or as extensive as replacing the lawn with a wildflower meadow and establishing a backyard wildlife sanctuary. Butterflies, birds, and other wild creatures need the shelter provided by a variety of trees and shrubs. This “wild and fuzzy” style is easier on you and the environment, while creating habitat for an intriguing array of

28. Index
species, plants and gardening styles, experts' butterfly gardens, informationon organizations, publications and events related to butterfly gardening.
http://butterflygardeners.com/list.htm

This site is hosted by
Netfirms Web Hosting Butterfly Gardeners' Quarterly Article Index
Butterfly Gardeners' Quarterly contains articles about butterfly species, plants and gardening styles, experts' butterfly gardens, information on organizations, publications and events related to butterfly gardening. Readers contribute their own gardening experiences in a column called "From Your Garden..." HALF-PRICE SPECIAL!!! Back issues (#2-14) are available for $1 each ppd; #15 and following issues are $1.25 ppd. NOTE: Highlighted titles are links to complete articles stored on this website. Issue # Season Feature Articles
28 Spring 01 Bradner Gardens Park: Community Garden Extraordinaire
FINAL ISSUE Curbside Gardening: Planting Strips for Butterflies
Social Butterflies 27 Winter 00-01 Salvias for Hummingbirds and Butterflies
Buckeyes
Native Bees 26 Fall 00 Sulphurs
Pre-holiday Gift Guide 25 Summer 00 Dragonflies in the Butterfly Garden
Mindful of Butterflies: Interview with Bernard Jackson
Phlox: Attractive to Butterflies and Moths 24 Spring 00 Tiger Swallowtails Lavender: An Herb for Butterflies Festival/Event Listings

29. Butterfly Gardening
Favorite host and nectar plants, and information on puddling, basking and shelter.Category Home Gardens Specialized Techniques Wildlife Butterfly...... Read about Milkweed Cafe butterfly gardening in At Home with Mary Engelbreit!Basic Design Elements for the Butterfly Garden. Butterfly Garden Term Glossary.
http://www.milkweedcafe.com/bflygarden.html
Welcome to our newly updated Butterfly Gardener's Page...We have added lots of new information! Whether you are gardening on an apartment balcony or a spacious country lot, you can bring butterflies around with a few simple techniques. Please feel free to use the links below to plan and maintain the perfect butterfly and wildlife garden for your space. At Home with Mary Engelbreit! Basic Design Elements for the Butterfly Garden Butterfly Garden Term Glossary Butterfly Garden Photographs Container Gardening for Butterflies - Coming Soon! Professionally Designed Garden Plan Diagram Butterfly Garden Plant Lists Butterfly Nectar Recipes - Coming soon! Watch a Caterpillar Hatch from its Egg! Photographs of Monarch Metamorphosis Photographs of Giant Swallowtail Emergence Caterpillar Shaped Tent ... E-Mail

30. Butterfly Gardening
StudyWeb Award, butterfly gardening in Michigan.
http://www.lsa.umich.edu/mbg/gardenforum/butterfly.html

31. Flying Flowers ...butterfly Gardening, Butterflies, Caterpillars, Butterfly, But
All about butterfly gardening. Lists of garden plants, and how to grow them. FLYINGFLOWERS butterfly gardening, Raising Butterflies and Caterpillars.
http://melanys.tripod.com/new index.htm
FLYING FLOWERS - Butterfly Gardening, Raising Butterflies and Caterpillars
FLYING FLOWERS
My Butterfly Garden Native Plants Butterfly articles I've written "My" Butterflies ... Other visitors to my yard The following links will take you away from Flying Flowers, you can use your "BACK" button to return here How I made a caterpillar nursery Plant a row for the butterflies Flying Flowers forum For the kids ... Flying Flowers chat room Want more? There is a whole 'community' of butterfly people out there. Contact them below: Subscribe to gardenwithbutterflies Powered by groups.yahoo.com Join me and lots of other 'butterfly huggers' in our email newsgroup "Garden with butterflies" Fill in your email address above and click "Join now" There is a wealth of experience and information here!!! Tell A Friend! Type In Your Name:
Type In Your E-mail:
Your Friend's E-mail:
Your Comments:
Receive copy: The

Gardening for Butterflies
SiteRing
This site owned by
Melany

Name: E-mail: Message to MelanyS: E-mail me!

32. Butterfly Gardening
How to build a shelter, provide host plants and water for butterfly's in your garden.Category Home Gardens Specialized Techniques Wildlife Butterfly...... The environment must be stable and predictable and balancing all the componentsbutterflies require is part of the challenge and art of butterfly gardening.
http://pavlov.psyc.queensu.ca/~davids/butterflies.html

33. Butterfly Gardening
Wildlife Habitat. Resources - Garden Patrol - butterfly gardening.ask an expert Ask the eNature naturalists your questions.
http://www.enature.com/backyardwildlife/butterfly/butterfly_garden_home.asp
site index: select a section HOME Ask an Expert Backyard Birding Wildlife Backyard Wildlife Habitats About Create your own Gallery Resources Birding Focus Regional Birding Backyard Birding Bird-watching Bird Audio eCards Field Guides Amphibians Birds Butterflies Fishes Insects Mammals Native Plants Reptiles Seashells Seashore Creatures Spiders Trees Wildflowers Help Center Join eNature Nature Theater News Outdoor Planner Bird Habitats Habitats Parkfinder Screen Savers Shop.eNature Wildlife Lists ZipGuides LocalGuides Mammal Tracks About Us Contact Info Media Kit Newsroom About This Site Free Content Links Member Services Privacy wildlife search: Field Guides News Articles Expert Answers Photographers The Web member features - Join NOW! Wildlife Lists Backyard Habitats Nature Theater ...
Backyard

Backyard Wildlife Habitat home page.
Take a look at other Backyard Wildlife Habitats.
More about creating your own Backyard Wildlife Habitat.
Resources

Garden Patrol

Butterfly Gardening

Ask the eNature naturalists your questions.
backyard birding

wildflowers
Attracting butterflies requires knowledge of the common butterfly species of an area and the plants that will nourish both adult butterflies and caterpillars.

34. Butterfly Gardening
Resources Garden Patrol - butterfly gardening. ask an expert Ask the eNaturenaturalists your questions. Back to butterfly gardening About Nectar Plants
http://www.enature.com/backyardwildlife/butterfly/about_nectar_plants.asp
site index: select a section HOME Ask an Expert Backyard Birding Wildlife Backyard Wildlife Habitats About Create your own Gallery Resources Birding Focus Regional Birding Backyard Birding Bird-watching Bird Audio eCards Field Guides Amphibians Birds Butterflies Fishes Insects Mammals Native Plants Reptiles Seashells Seashore Creatures Spiders Trees Wildflowers Help Center Join eNature Nature Theater News Outdoor Planner Bird Habitats Habitats Parkfinder Screen Savers Shop.eNature Wildlife Lists ZipGuides LocalGuides Mammal Tracks About Us Contact Info Media Kit Newsroom About This Site Free Content Links Member Services Privacy wildlife search: Field Guides News Articles Expert Answers Photographers The Web member features - Join NOW! Wildlife Lists Backyard Habitats Nature Theater ...
Backyard

Backyard Wildlife Habitat home page.
Take a look at other Backyard Wildlife Habitats.
More about creating your own Backyard Wildlife Habitat.
Resources

Garden Patrol

Butterfly Gardening

Ask the eNature naturalists your questions.
backyard birding

wildflowers
Back to Butterfly Gardening About Nectar Plants Butterfly Gardening Topics About Butterflies About Nectar Plants About Food Plants Regional Butterfly ... Garden Guides There are a few considerations to keep in mind when creating a place for butterflies, whether it's adding a one-gallon container to the front porch or revamping the entire backyard.

35. Butterfly Gardens & Habitats
Butterfly Gardens Habitats. NABA's Program for Butterfly Gardens Habitats has produced regional butterfly gardening brochures.
http://www.naba.org/pubs/bgh.html
Purpose
Membership

Butterflies at Weddings

Publications
...
Recent Sightings
has produced regional butterfly gardening brochures . Each one focuses on a particular region of North America and includes such information as and general comments about gardening in this region. These regional brochures are meant for use with the set of introductory butterfly gardening brochures . These introductory brochures explain the concepts and techniques of butterfly gardening applicable throughout the U.S. and southern Canada. These information-packed brochures include Straight Talk about Butterfly Biology, Basics of Butterfly Gardening, Flowers for the Butterfly Garden (including garden hints and sources), and Familiar Butterflies of North America. Please note that all the information is also available for free by downloading the PDF files from the web site by clicking on the appropriate links below.
Name:_
Address:_
City:_ State:_ Zip:
Set of introductory butterfly gardening brochures (price $4.00)
(Straight Talk about Butterfly Biology (PDF available) , Basics of Butterfly Gardening (PDF available) , Flowers for the Butterfly Garden (PDF available) , Familiar Butterflies of North America (PDF available)
Regional butterfly gardening brochures (price $5.00 each) (PDF files available also, please see below)

36. Butterfly Links - North American Butterfly Association
butterfly gardening Links. NABA Butterfly Gardens and Habitats. ButterflyGardening Florida; butterfly gardening Monarch Watch;
http://www.naba.org/links.html
Purpose
Membership

Butterfly Releases and Weddings

Publications
...
Recent Sightings
General Links
Special Links
Local Links
Alberta
Arkansas
Arizona
California
Florida
Georgia
Illinois
Kansas
Massachusetts
Michigan
Missouri
New Jersey
New York / New Jersey
North Carolina
Ohio
Ontario
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina

37. Butterfly Gardening - E-Files - Sierra Club
butterfly gardening. Successful butterfly gardening will require you to learn howto control garden pests without resorting to broadspectrum pesticides.
http://www.sierraclub.org/e-files/butterflygardening.asp
Select an Issue Clean Water Energy Global Population Human Rights Protect National Forests Responsible Trade Stop Sprawl Stop Global Warming Wildlands Campaign More Issues Select a Place Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Canada Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
E-Files
Main
Get Started With...
Think Again! ... Printer-Friendly Version
Butterfly Gardening Butterflies make a lovely addition to any landscape, whether it's a mountain meadow or a suburban backyard, but they are extremely sensitive to environmental depradations such as deforestation and the overuse of insecticides and fertilizers. Many species have already become extinct, and many more are endangered. Fortunately, it's surprisingly easy to create a garden environment that can attract, shelter, and nurture these colorful insects, helping to ensure that future generations will enjoy their beauty. Start small.

38. Butterfly Gardening - Books - Sierra Club
butterfly gardening Creating Summer Magic in Your Garden. By TheXerces Society/The Smithsonian Institution ISBN 0871569752 240
http://www.sierraclub.org/books/catalog/0871569752.asp
Select an Issue Clean Water Energy Global Population Human Rights Protect National Forests Responsible Trade Stop Sprawl Stop Global Warming Wildlands Campaign More Issues Select a Place Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Canada Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming
Store
Main Books Main ... Special Buys Books for Kids Picture Books Middle Readers Young Adults Submission Guidelines
Butterfly Gardening
Creating Summer Magic in Your Garden By The Xerces Society/The Smithsonian Institution
ISBN: 0871569752
240 pages
130 color photographs
Price: $24.95 paperback This new edition of the classic handbook describes how to attract butterflies and other beneficial and beautiful insects to your garden. Butterfly Gardening presents everything the gardener needs to know to create intricate, small-scale ecosystems in an urban or suburban setting that can substitute for the rapidly vanishing habitats that are essential to the survival of butterflies. Contributors to this volume include Miriam Rothschild, an eminent entomologist, avid butterfly gardener, and expert in wildflower conservation, who describes the life cycle of butterflies, how and what they see, and how this relates to "gardening with butterflies." Landscape architect Mary Booth provides imaginative garden designs and easy-to-follow directions for designing and planting. Edward S. Ross, pioneer of close-up nature photography, discusses observing and photographing butterflies.

39. Butterfly Campaign
However, this does not constitute butterfly gardening. butterfly gardeningis the only way to accomplish the goals of this campaign.
http://www.butterflyworld.com/campaign.html

BRING BACK THE
BUTTERFLIES CAMPAIGN
Butterfly World's BRING BACK THE BUTTERFLIES campaign is a North American effort to help people bring large numbers of butterflies back to our landscape. It is a call for people across the Continental United States and Canada to build a small garden in an effort to reverse the ongoing destruction of butterfly habitat in their local area.
REGIONAL GARDEN GUIDEBOOK
  • Oregon, Washington, southern British Columbia
    Arizona, California, Nevada

    Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Utah, Wyoming, southern Alberta, southern Saskatchewan, southwest Manitoba

    New Mexico, Texas
    ...
    Southernmost Florida

  • CAMPAIGN BACKGROUND
    Dwindling butterfly populations are due to habitat destruction in both urban and rural areas. This is caused by construction, pesticides in farming, forest spraying for Gypsy moths, and mosquito spraying programs that are using new, powerful chemicals. Many of these chemicals are now distributed by airplane, blanketing entire areas. Everyday we hear the question, "How can we bring the butterflies back?". At Butterfly World, our research shows that planting the host plants for butterfly caterpillars is the most effective solution, a great deal more effective than planting nectar sources for adult butterflies. These host plants are the plants the caterpillars eat, and in most cases these plants are specific to each butterfly species. Fortunately, both male and female butterflies seem to be able to find these plants from long distances. Female butterflies search for them because it is there that they must lay their eggs, and male butterflies seem to find them because of the presence of females.

    40. Fredericksburg Butterfly Ranch Habitat Live Butterfly Releases Butterfly Gift Sh
    gift shop! Learn how to attract butterflies to your yard at the RanchRoundup featuring the latest on butterfly gardening tips.
    http://www.livebutterfly.com/
    Willkommen! Don't miss the flourish of fluttering beauties
    in the brand new butterfly gift shop Learn how to attract butterflies to your yard at the "Ranch Round-up"
    featuring the latest on butterfly gardening tips.
    Online
    Butterfly Gift Shop
    RANCH ROUND-UP Butterfly Gardening Tips ...
    Gallery
    The unique and historic Loeffler-Weber House built in 1846 during the first winter of Fredericksburg's existence, is the setting for one Fredericksburg's most interesting and informative places to visit Our Mission
    At the Butterfly Ranch, our mission is to inspire wonder and awe for one of God's creations, the butterfly, and to promote and encourage backyard habitats to help increase the natural butterfly population. Fun for the whole family . . . When you visit our active working butterfly ranch specializing in native Texas butterflies and plants, you will witness the magic of nature's beauty unfold before your eyes. As you leisurely stroll through the Ranch's relaxing gardens and butterfly house, you can see pretty butterflies dancing merrily by peaceful ponds. Enjoy embracing science and nature when you tour our 1500 sq. ft. walk-through Butterfly House and observe the natural behavior of six to twelve different species of native Texas butterflies as they float gracefully among native plants. On your self-guided tour of the gardens and habitat, you can learn the secret to attracting and keeping butterflies in your yard by having the plants they can't resist.

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