The yellow beauty

This morning I spent quite a few hours in the garden with the company of the orange barred sulphur butterfly.

I have made it to the far section of the garden where my candlestick cassia plant is located, a favorite of the sulphur, with my stone pathway.

She kept fluttering in, flying high and low, close and far away from me. I lost count of how many eggs this sulphur left behind on its host plant.

The plant is already loaded with caterpillars of every instar.

The cycle continues

The orange-barred sulphur butterflies absolutely love my candlestick cassia. They are constantly laying eggs on the edge of the leaves, continuing the lifecycle.

The female’s coloring changes from winter to summer, while the male remains bright yellow with an orange bar on its forewing, and a yellow hindwing with orange edges. The under surface of the male wings has small dark spots.

The caterpillars are pretty neat – those that eat the leaves are mainly green, while those that eat the yellow flowers are yellow.

Happiness

I love walking out to the butterfly house and seeing new life. Its an instant smile.

The last orange barred sulphur emerged early this morning in the butterfly house.

This butterfly is one of abundance in the garden currently. I always spot multiple ones flying about, laying eggs, or sipping nectar. I have two of its host plants – the bahama cassia and candlestick cassia. They are planted on opposite corners of the garden and are thriving again, as I trimmed them both back. New growth is sprouting, mostly covered in eggs.

Egg bombing

I had countless rays of sunshine fluttering about the garden yesterday. There were multiple orange barred sulphur butterflies laying eggs at the same time on both my candlestick cassia and bahama cassia. It caught and kept my attention for a while.

They are almost impossible to photograph, these fast flyers, so it’s a thrill when I am able to capture a good photo!

Sulphur galore

We have had a record number of sulphur butterflies emerge in our butterfly house, 25 in 10 days. We’ve had both orange barred and cloudless sulphur butterflies emerge.

The best part . . . the number of sulphurs fluttering about the garden every day continuing the life cycle. The photo below shows many white eggs that have been deposited on the edge of the candlestick cassia plant.