Dallas Garden Design
The beauty of well-balanced garden design can sometimes be enhanced by a special theme or focus. Hobbyists such as bird watchers can use a specialty garden to expand the enjoyment of their hobby into the back yard. Children’s gardens are teaching and family bonding spaces. Here are a few ideas for gardens with a theme.
Wildlife and Bird Sanctuary Gardens
|
Butterfly Gardens
What butterflies need.
|
Choosing the space for your Dallas Garden
- You may have lots of space, or you may have little, even a spaced as small as 3 feet by 6 feet will hold enough flowers to attract butterflies. You can even use a window box or 304 containers on a deck.
- Butterflies enjoy flat stones for basking or sunbathing. Edge the garden with rounded rocks, put a small pile towards one side, or make a path through the flowers with flat stepping stones.
- Choose a sunny spot. Butterflies need the heat of the sun to raise their body temperatures, which helps them to fly.
- Provide water, a concave rock, a pot saucer filled with wet sand, a birdbath.
- Consult your local nursery professional or call Absolutely Bushed Landscaping for specialty items that attract butterflies
Choosing the plants
Variety is the key. Choose lots of kinds of plants, herbs, annuals, and perennials as vines, ground covers and in beds, plus shrubs and trees. Wildflower meadows featuring native plants are ideal. Try to plan the garden with plants that bloom at different times to keep something in bloom all season. It is not necessary to integrate the larval food with adult butterfly food.
- Be sure to provide moisture.
- Adults enjoy plants in full sun or in sites sheltered from the wind.
- Plant flowers that grow at a variety of heights. Butterflies can be territorial.
- Most butterflies don’t migrate and their eggs will be laid around your yard over the winter in weedy sites or woodpiles that provide them safe shelter.
-
Consult your local nursery professional or call Absolutely Bushed Landscaping for recommended plants for your area.
Flowers Absolutely Bushed Landscaping Can Add to Your Design Plan
Butterfly Larval Host Plants Asters
Bermuda grass
Hollyhock
Mallow
Marigold
MilkweedPassionflower
Plantain
Snapdragon
Sorrel
St. Augustine grass
VioletButterfly Flower Favorites (adult)
Larval host plants are often unattractive, weedy, and wild and voracious feeding immediately after hatching will virtually skeleton host plant foliage. Monarch moms choose milkweed for their eggs. Favorites of others include aster, Joe-Pye weed, Black-eyed Susan, Lantana, Butterfly bush, Liatris, Butterfly weed, Pentas, coreopsis, and purple coneflower. Swallowtail caterpillars devour Queen Anne’s Lace, carrots, and parsley, giving them their name parsley worm.Adult Butterfly Hosts
Flower nectar needed for energy is provided by any flowering plant but butterflies are particularly attracted to hot-colored, fragrant flowers. They get nutrition from moisture from moisture, even human perspiration if you stand very still.
How do you tell a good caterpillar from a harmful one?
Butterfly larvae tend to be solitary or sparsely distributed whereas pest caterpillars make tents and hatch in the hundreds.
In some cases, larvae of attractive butterflies may damage food or ornamental crops. Decide how much you want to share before indulging in a butterfly garden.
Fragrance Garden
Caution – some new hybrids of traditional plants may not be fragrant. Contact Us for More Information.
Planning the Fragrance Garden
- Plant fragrant flowers and vines near windows and doors so a whiff of wind will whisk the scent inside.
- Select one or two flowers or plants to provide the dominant scents and use other flowers known for their fragrance sparingly.
Flowers Absolutely Bushed Can Add to Your Design Plan
Clethra – shady wet areas (Mock Orange) Viburnum Artemisia Russian sage Phlox Lilies HostasHerbs Mint thyme | Vines Clematis Honeysuckle |
Resources for Your Dallas Garden Can Be Found Here
National Wildlife Federation has a Backyard Wildlife Habitats Program
Texas Parks & Wildlife backyard habitat program called Wildscapes
Article Adapted from Landscape Texas