New pathways

I’m really excited about the two pathways that are going through the butterfly garden.

The brick pathway is through the first portion of the garden, which is complete. My daughter painted them years ago, but the paint has since come off, or fading a ton. I may have to scrub them clean, so she can create new designs on them again.

The stone pathway I began today to go through the second portion of the garden.

This pathway, although is very time consuming, I’m loving how it is turning out. My husband brought bricks home years ago and I never knew quite what to do with them. I started getting rid of them, a little every week, until an idea sprung.

I am now using a sledge hammer and breaking them to create another artsy pathway. It’s a huge jigsaw puzzle putting all the broken pieces together.

The best part of today, of course was watching the variety of butterflies that visited the garden while I was out there. We had monarchs, gulf fritillaries, orange barred sulphurs, great southern whites, dainty sulphurs, Cassius blue, polydamas swallowtail and one I got extremely excited about, the giant swallowtail. I sure have created an oasis!

This video shows a polydamas swallowtail, orange barred sulphur and gulf fritillary.

Rewarding

I’ve been in the garden nonstop since last week pulling weeds, trimming plants, laying a new pathway and of course planting new plants before laying mulch down.

Today I targeted a new section of the garden, a path going into the newer portion.

Its always rewarding to get your hands dirty and making your vision come alive, a vision that often times is a fluid approach when it the garden.

This morning after I planted a white zinnia in a pot my daughter painted, a gulf fritillary found the nectar and had quite a feast. The best part, I was not too far away and the butterfly was not bothered by me at all.

Tranquility

The Cape Coral-Lee County Public Library has a very tranquil butterfly garden. The space has a variety of plants and places to sit while watching butterflies fluttering about. The butterfly that caught and kept my attention was the gulf fritillary butterfly.

I love visiting other butterfly gardens because it gives me great inspiration and ideas for my own space. I think I need to add these two plants to my garden. The colors are remarkable.

The dwarf poinciana is incredibly beautiful and ideal for spaces that cannot handle a full tree. These plants are fast growers that can grow to be 10 to 12 feet, but if trimmed can stay within 6 to 8 feet. It says it can tolerate warmer areas of Zone B, but is ideal in Zone 10. The leaves can drop if temperatures drop into the 40s.

In the younger stages of the tree it can have thorns, but will eventually disappear as it matures and the bark begins to form. Although it is drought tolerant once established, it prefers regular watering with time to dry.

It is also recommended to trim the tree in the autumn – mid-October, about 18 inches on each branch, which will remove seed pods and encourage new growth before winter. It can be trimmed again in the summer after it blooms for the first time.

The Panama rose, also referred to as the “bush penta” is a great butterfly attractor. The cluster of pink tubular flowers have a yellow center. It blooms from December through May each year, with blooms occurring on and off throughout the year. According to the University of Florida the flowers fragrance is more intense at night, while the fragrance is lighter in the day when the butterflies visit the plant.

This plant does best in full sun to part-shade. Once established it is moderately drought tolerant, but likes to be in soil that is well-drained. It can be kept at 3-5 feet tall if carefully pruned during the early summer.

The right kind of nectar.

The gulf fritillary butterflies are abundant in the garden this morning sipping on a variety of nectar.

The blanket flower, which I love because it reseeds itself everywhere and it’s such a gorgeous flower.

The plumbago, another great flower, was also a stop for nectar. This plant is a fast grower. I’m constantly cutting it back, promoting great bushy growth.

Perfect day

My poor garden has been neglected lately – add daily rain to the mixture, and it is out of control.

So, today, I had much needed garden therapy. It’s amazing, and special, to have butterflies flutter so close, almost landing on you while you work on their designated space.

Before I finished, I spotted the beginning of the mating ritual of two gulf fritillary butterflies.

Nature is incredible to watch.