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Butterfly Gardening Blog

Welcome! This blog is mostly about butterfly gardening, but other types of plants and gardens, as well as other wildlife is blogged about too.


May 26, 2006


Hot and sunny here again!

Filed under: Web Site News — Butterflygirl @ 3:59 pm

It’s been warm and mostly dry the past couple of days now – so plants are starting to grow again! I will get pictures of what is blooming now real soon. I’ll get pictures of the caterpillars I’m raising now too – they might be big enough to get them with the digital camera now even.

Meanwhile – look at this: Friday Sprog Blogging: lepidoptery – one of Janet Stemwedel/Dr. Free-Ride kids is interested in growing carrots to feed caterpillars and wants to study them! If I ever have kids, gosh I hope they are interested in butterfly gardening too!





8 Responses to 'Hot and sunny here again!'

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  1. MsQ said,

    on May 29th, 2006 at 1:48 pm

    Hello – found your blog while Googling Black Swallowail butterflies………Found close to a dozen B.S. larvae on the fennel in my butterfly garden this past week. Two were already about 4cm & have since moved – can’t seem to find their chrysalis on the fennel – I know what to look for as I raised 2 B.S. inside in a glass aquarium last year. I don’t think at this time of the year in St. Louis they would go out to a tree (3 years ago had 2 B.S. chrysalis overwinter on a tree in the backyard but missed their emergence). Butterfly gardening & photography are my 2 passions & feel they go hand in hand!!
    MsQ/Dottie
    BTW – Is your name Trisha? If so, I think we may have corrsponded about butterfly gardening either last year or the year before – I found the name of your website today on a list of websites I wrote down at some point!

  2. Rick said,

    on June 6th, 2006 at 3:01 pm

    Hi, I don’t know much about butterfly’s and have a question to ask. We live in the hills with wild life around and A few months ago there were thousands of Monarch butterfly’s coming through my yard. They were in a stream coming over my back fence and coming by the house. I thought that was amazing until they kept coming day after day, that was more amazing. All together it was about 2 weeks worth. Now I have seen black caterpillars all over the place. They show up on the walk ways, driveways, just everywere. Are these going to turn into butterfly’s like the Monarch?
    Thanks Rick

  3. Butterflygirl said,

    on June 8th, 2006 at 4:32 pm

    MsQ/Dottie – Yes, I am Trisha! We may have emailed about butterfly gardening before, I’m not sure either now. Black Swallowtails usually wander fairly far away to pupate, so its not surprising that you couldn’t find them on the fennel. About where do you live?

    Rick – That is so cool that you live near a migration route! I have never seen them while they were migrating before. I bet that was pretty impressive! Monarch caterpillars are black and white and yellow – see the pictures here: http://www.butterflygardeningandconservation.com/butterfly/bf/d/monarch.php

  4. MsQ said,

    on June 18th, 2006 at 8:23 am

    Hi……..I live in west St. Louis County…….Amazing that Rick saw so many monarchs – I also wonder where he lives……..I have 2 milkweeds in bloom so far & just beginning to notice a monarch now & then. Have baby birds being born……..Had one clutch of 4 robins born in May, another baby robin born last week (only one despite 3 eggs). Also had 3 sparrows born (despite 7 eggs) – they have already flown from the nest. Isn’t nature amazing!! Now if I could only keep the grackles from devouring the bird seed & suet! And keep the rabbits from devouring the coreopsis!!!

  5. MsQ said,

    on June 18th, 2006 at 8:28 am

    Me again – went into the link above – love your pics – I also got pics of monarchs mating last summer!

  6. wendy said,

    on June 27th, 2006 at 6:12 pm

    Hi,
    I love your site! I wanted to find out what kind of butterfly larvae we had and googled images which brought me to your site. We have a spicebush swallowtail. Found a tiny larvae on a sassafrass leaf, which we have now been feeding this guy daily. Wow! I am amazed at all the changes this larvae goes through! I didn’t see on your site, (maybe I missed it) how many days until the butterfly emerges from the chrysalis.Ours is probably at the 3rd instar so I am assuming that the butterfly will not overwinter, but I don’t know. Anyway great site. Wonderful information!

  7. Butterflygirl said,

    on June 27th, 2006 at 7:55 pm

    Wendy – Don’t you just love Spicebush Swallowtails! They are my favorite caterpillar! How it takes to emerge depends a bit on how hot or cold it is outside. In the middle of the summer, maybe 10-14 days.

  8. bonnie said,

    on October 7th, 2006 at 10:49 am

    I like your site. I enjoy reading your updates with you butterflies. Hope I can have a large area where I can do the same as you are. Like to check every updates of your site.

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