Birds & Blooms

Top 10 Butterfly Favorites

It's not that hard to add some winged wonder to your backyard...just add flowers!

plant database
Photo: RDA GID

Aster

A wonderful cut flower, asters make any garden explode with color at the end of the growing season. From miniature alpine plants to giants up to 6 feet tall, there are over 250 asters, with plenty of colors to choose from. Asters are a great way to brighten up the fall landscape in your backyard.


plant database
Photo: RDA GID

Blazing star

Also called gayfeather or liatris, this flower attracts butterflies and hummingbirds to its spikes of lavender, rose, or white flowers. American goldfinches, tufted titmice and other seed eaters savor its seed heads.


plant database
Photo: Bluestone Perennials

Butterfly bush

Though its exuberant profile can be fairly informal, this plant is a staple in many hummingbird gardens. The blooms also easily attract birds and butterflies with their arching branches of vibrant flower clusters.

While it may seem like hummingbirds flock to the blooms for the sweet fragrance, it's actually the plant's nectar that makes it so attractive to the birds.


plant database
Photo: Dutch Gardens

Butterfly weed

Increase your winged population and decrease your water bill with butterfly weed. This beauty's flat-topped clusters provide a nectar source for butterflies and hummingbirds, proving that despite its name, its anything but a pest.


plant database
Photo: RDA GID

Coreopsis

With its demure veil of jeweled blooms, coreopsis adds charm to cottage gardens and formal flower beds alike. Dainty flowers, thin stems and fine foliage disguise the fact that this plant's as tough as nails. It's also great for cutting and readily attracts butterflies.


plant database
Photo: Park Seed, www.parkseed.com

Pentas

Once used primarily as a houseplant, pentas have made their way from hothouses and windowsills into seed catalogs, nurseries and backyard landscapes.

The versatile plant - valued for its vibrantly hued blossoms and continuous bloom - is equally at home in flower borders, cutting gardens, hanging baskets, rock gardens, and patio containers.

Pentas are gotta-have-it inclusions in wildlife gardens - the plants' star-shaped flowers attract bevies of nectar-seeking hummingbirds.