RE: beautiful site...
Pam, my caryopteris has come back 3 years in a row now and I sure hope it
continues to like its home! Your should not have any trouble getting
through a Texas winter.
Blessings,
Bonnie
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-gardenchat@hort.net [o*@hort.net] On Behalf
Of Pamela J. Evans
Sent: Sunday, August 03, 2003 11:40 AM
To: gardenchat@hort.net
Subject: Re: [CHAT] beautiful site...
Bonnie - those are the black swallowtails I adore so much and since you have
fennel - they will come.
That's why I planted the fennel and lots of parsley - it's the host food
plant for both kinds of swallowtails - my favorites! I have both kinds
also and just love 'em. The adults are all over my caryopteris shrubs.
Don't know if they're hardy there, but if they are - worth the
investment. The hummers like them too.
---------- Original Message ----------------------------------
From: "Bonnie & Bill Morgan" <wmorgan972@ameritech.net>
Reply-To: gardenchat@hort.net
Date: Sun, 3 Aug 2003 06:38:27 -0400
>I have to share some of the sights in my garden the last two days with
folks
>who can understand why it tickles me so much. Friday evening (between
>storms) I took Izzie, the bulldog, out for her constitutional and Bill
>called my attention to a monarch collecting nectar from various plants in
>the bed to the right of our driveway near the street. It kept flirting
with
>my milkweed (swamp milkweed, asclepiad-sp?) so I'm hopeful it might lay
eggs
>upon the milkweed so I may enjoy more monarchs. Monarchs have been very
>rare in my area for some time, so it really was a joy to see it.
>
>Speaking of swamp milkweed, I knew I had a pod split and spread it's seed
>last fall, but I hadn't seen any more pop up in the bed, but I just found
>about 3 plants had wedged themselves at the edge of a "wild" forested area
>near the property line in back! Maybe it'll bring even more monarchs? I
>sure hope so. Since I don't use bug killer products in my planting beds or
>the yard itself, I know the yard is caterpillar friendly.
>
>Then today, I took the phone out to Bill to talk with someone who had
called
>as he was cutting grass. I turned back toward the house and spied two
>swallowtail butterflies in the "butterfly garden." One of them was a tiger
>swallowtail with the normal black and yellow pattern, but the other was a
>black except for the bottom section of wing on both sides. That area was
an
>iridescent blue. Both of them flittered together, landing side by side on
>server coneflowers growing there, not quite long enough for me to get my
>camera (of course!) but they flew off to another yard together as well. Is
>it possible that the black butterfly was the male counterpart to a female
>yellow tiger swallowtail? Any ideas?
>
>Oh, and I think I have a datura blooming! The scent really is
intoxicating!
>How wonderful! It isn't as tall as I thought it would be at about 18", but
>the beauty of that white trumpet flower clothed in that magnificent perfume
>is a little heaven on earth.
>
>It doesn't take much to make me happy: decent soil, some plants to tend
and
>weed, some mulch and compost and for the good Lord to bless me with "flying
>flowers" is a bonus!
>
>Blessings,
>
>Bonnie
>
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>
--
Pam Evans
Kemp TX/zone 8A
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