Finally rain

Southwest Florida has had a pretty extreme drought this year, so when it actually rains, I get really excited. I am happy that my garden is mostly native, with well established plants, as it still thrives with the lack of rain we have been experiencing.

I just finished working on the garden – 3 weeks of hard, yet relaxing and gratifying work.

Mist flower

It seems as though every spring I get pulled into the garden for a reimagined look. Although, a good portion was left the same, I added new walkways around my well established plants, redesigned other walkways, curbed the garden to separate it from the yard, and layed 40 plus bags of mulch down.

The rain came in handy because I of course added new plants to fill new spaces. These are still becoming established.

I try to add a new butterfly host plant to the garden every year to see what more I can attract.

Wild petunia

The nectar plants seem to remain the same for the most part, as it has been trial and error of what grows well in my sandy soil.

Black Eyed Susan

The Black Eyed Susan was one of the first flowers I planted six years ago. Unfortunately, both times I tried adding it in the garden it did not do well. Now that my garden offers both shade and sunny areas I decided to give it another try. The rain definitely helped with this plant tonight.

Black Eyed Susan

The zinnia and lantana are new, yet old plants, that I replenish every year, as they are butterfly favorites.

Zinnia
Lantana

Some of other plants pictured below are in multiple spots in the garden, while the butterfly bush was just too beautiful not to add to the space.

Fire bush
Starry rosinweed
Butterfly bush

The gulf fritillary

It’s always fun to find where the caterpillars end up in the garden, as more times than not they are far from their host plant.

This gulf fritillary decided to make its chrysalis on my lantana plant yesterday. When I checked on it this afternoon it had created its chrysalis.

There are so many more caterpillars in different instars throughout the garden.

The final one

Our last white peacock butterfly emerged a few days ago, taking our final count to six that we were able to raise from caterpillars we brought home from Butterfly Estates. I now have four plants for them to lay eggs on in the garden, so hopefully they will return and keep their population going. It’s been a few days since I have seen them return.

The white peacock butterfly is on a white lantana, firebush, blue porterweed bush, red penta, pink zinnia, cone flower and scorpion tail. These are all amazing nectar plants to have in the garden.

Grateful

One word comes to mind, “grateful.”

Grateful I began a butterfly garden a number of years ago. Grateful that I get to watch the incredible journey from an egg, to a stunning monarch butterfly. Grateful I get to photograph such amazing moments, such as this male enjoying some sweet almond bush nectar. Grateful that my daughter enjoys the gardens, and butterflies, as much as I do.

These last few days I have had so much fun watching the monarch butterflies eat. Today’s feast was sweet almond bush, lantana and pentas. My daughter was extremely excited to pick out pink and purple pentas today, while I was ecstatic to add another sweet almond bush to the nectar variety. The aroma of the sweet almond bush is incredible.

The amazement was how much they sip until they rest, or fly away. It definitely put a perspective of how much nectar a butterfly garden should have in addition to its host plants.

Here are a few from my photoshoot for today.

https://videos.files.wordpress.com/v1j4kFf8/20230206_170558.mp4
https://videos.files.wordpress.com/RyFqDvFO/20230206_171027.mp4

The lovely

Tons of gulf fritillary butterflies are visiting the gardens today.

Here’s an assortment of the three visitors I was able to photograph . . . sipping on nectar (blue porterweed and lantana), resting and laying eggs.

It’s fascinating to watch them. One of them went from host plant to host plant laying eggs and then stopping at a nectar plant to take a sip before returning to lay more.

There was one that almost landed on my leg a few times, almost.