Butterfly Garden Design

Discuss your green thumb (or lack thereof ;-) when it comes to propagation of milkweed and other garden plants.

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Butterfly Garden Design

Postby Farfallina » Tue Apr 03, 2007 5:27 pm

I just found this garden design on the Better Homes and Garden website. I think it looks great and plan on using it in my garden this Spring. I'm so excited to get planting!

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I thought I would share it here just in case anyone else was looking for a nice design. You can download the free planting guide for this garden including a larger version of the illustration, a detailed layout diagram, a list of plants for the garden as shown, a list of alternatives for each plant, and complete instructions for installing the garden (Free, one-time registration allows unlimited access to Planting Guides for all garden plans.) at this link:

http://www.bhg.com/bhg/story.jsp?storyid=/templatedata/bhg/story/data/butterflygarden.xml&page=1&plckCurrentPage=0
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Postby RozieMozie » Sun Apr 08, 2007 5:08 pm

very nice! too bad i dont have the room for tht :(
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Postby John Beaulieu » Tue Jun 26, 2007 10:29 am

I have lots of photos of individual plants flowering, and sections of the garden, but found it hard to capture an overall shot. I wound up setting up a large step-ladder in the middle of the backyard and shooting the main perennial beds that way. This is actually two shots (combined on the computer) to show most of this garden area.

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Out of sight to the back left (behind a rail fence) is an area which used to be a veggie garden. It is now sown with various milkweeds which can be used for caterpillar food (when they mature in a few years). It is a slow process growing milkweed from seed. The little white wire rack to the right protects some swamp milkweed seedlings from being trampled by our cat or visiting raccoons. There is a little goldfish pond in the grove of sumac and other shrubs on the right hand side.

We have the usual assortment of perennials, that allow for an ever changing transition of bloom through the seasons. This includes; iris (siberian and bearded), peonies, phlox, daisies, coneflowers, hardy geraniums and several different perennial sages. Lately we have added several eupatoriums such as Joe-Pye weed, Boneset, Chocolate and dwarf Joe-Pye.

John
John Beaulieu & Brenda Stride
Midhurst, Ontario CANADA
MONARCH WAYSTATION NO. 553
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Postby Farfallina » Sat Jul 21, 2007 3:04 pm

John,
Thank you for sharing your garden. It is lovely! Nice job! :D
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