Re: butterfly bush
- To: g*@hort.net
- Subject: Re: [CHAT] butterfly bush
- From: "Chapel Ridge Wal Mart National Hearing Center" 4*@nationalhearing.com
- Date: Tue, 14 Jun 2005 09:27:49 -0600
- References: <32109317.1118721218567.JavaMail.root@sniper28>
Donna -
Technicalities...
Asclepias tuberosa is Common Butterfly Weed
(aka: Butterfly Flower, Butterfly Root, Chieger Flower, Flux Root, Indian
Paintbrush, Indian Potato, Orange Root, Pleurisy Root, Swallow Root, Tuber
Root, White Root, Wind Root, Windward Root)
A. syriaca is the Common Milkweed.
(aka: Common Silkweed, Silk Grass, Silky Swallow wort, Virginian Silk)
A. incarnata is Swamp Milkweed or Water Nerveroot
Kitty
----- Original Message -----
From: "Donna" <gossiper@sbcglobal.net>
To: <gardenchat@hort.net>
Sent: Monday, June 13, 2005 9:44 PM
Subject: RE: [CHAT] butterfly bush
> Asclepias tuberose is the orange common one. My Monarchs don't seen to
mind
> which one they attack. I love them, but have gotten rid of the common one
as
> I just can't deal with all those aphids! The pink (incarnata) and white
(Ice
> Ballet?) don't seem to be bothered with aphids as bad...at least
> controllable!
>
> I bet that strip is gorgeous in bloom Auralie! Who knows maybe some day I
> will get up into your neck of the woods to see both great places, yours
and
> Henriette Suhr's garden.
>
> Donna
>
> >
> > The milkweed that is specific for monarch is "common" milkweed,
> > Asclepias syriaca, which has very pale lavendar or pinkish flowers.
> > I think they may eat some others, as I have seen them on my cultivated
> > Asclepias, too. The "swamp" milkweed is, according to the Audubon
> > Society Field Guide, Asclepias incarnata, a deep pink flower. I am
> > not familiar with it, but doubt it is the one specific for monarchs, for
> > the
> > guide says it contains less of the milky sap that gives monarchs their
> > protective nasty taste to predators. I have a bed of the "common"
> > ones in the narrow strip between the drive and the boulder. People
> > say "you have to get rid of those weeds," but I encourage them. Not
> > only for the monarchs, but because I like them. I think the flowers are
> > lovely, I love their fragrance, and if I am lucky enough to get pods, I
> > love them, too, for dried flower arrangements and various crafts.
> > When the plants begin to get ratty late in the summer I just cut them
> > down unless they have bods - most don't.
> > But then I guess you all know by now that my garden is not your
> > conventional flower-bed.
> > Auralie
> >
> > In a message dated 06/13/2005 5:41:15 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
> > tchessie@comcast.net writes:
> > Do monachs use any of the other asclepias? Exactly which one it "swamp
> > milkweed"?
> >
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