My butterfly garden – year 3 and some other native plant choices

Fri. Jul. 12, 2019

Click below to listen to my 2 min. Garden Bite radio show:  My butterfly garden – year 3 and some other native plant choices

July 4th, 2019 Teri Knight – butterfly weed, coneflower, hairy vervain coming 

It got a late start this season, with that nasty winter/spring thing we had going on but it’s looking quite lovely with the butterfly weed, hairy beardtongue, early sunflower coming and vervain pushing through.

Hairy beardtongue
2019 butterfly weed and coneflower

More blooms will take place later this year. I have noticed powdery mildew on my monarda – that’s typical, especially after such a soggy start.

some black-eyed susan coming along as of July 7

I also wanted to share some other amazing native options for the Upper Midwest.  First up, Purple Lovegrass

Purple Love Grass

This darling offers up rosy-purple little flowers above spiky foliage from now through Fall.  It grows to about 2 feet tall and likes full sun and a drier soil. It’s a bunch grass and grows in clumps of about 10 inches.  It’s lovely as a border or mass planting. And is deer resistant! Maybe rabbits too??

Prairie Onion is not favored by the bunnies, BONUS, strategically placing this in the landscape may even protect other plants. 

Prairie onion

Great idea! Prairie Onion also blooms from now into early Fall. It grows up to 2 feet tall and 1 foot wide and likes full sun to part shade.  The soft purply pink flowers also attract butterflies and bees. By the way, the bulbs of wild onions are edible.

For something completely different, try Eastern prickly pear cactus.  Yes, a cactus that’s not only able to grow here but is a native to the upper midwest! Look for the latin name, ‘Opuntia humifusa’.  

Eastern Prickly Pear

If you have a hot, dry, sandy spot then try the prickly pear. From June to July, the cactus puts out some of the most stunning flowers. Bathed in bright yellow, the 3″ wide blooms are immediately set upon by a myriad of different pollinator species. Beetles, bees, and butterflies, this plant attracts them all. After flowering, the pads produce bright red, edible fruits that are almost as attractive as the flowers.

Prickly pear fruit by Boyce Thompson Arboretum