The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)
Bring in the butterflies
By following a seasonal to-do list, you can do your bit to ensure that butterflies thrive, writes Hannah Stephenson
Tips on what to grow to attract beautiful butterflies in your spring garden.
Get gardening for butterflies is the message from this year’s Wild About Gardens campaign, organised by the RHS and the Wildlife Trusts. These valuable insects aren’t just beautiful to spot. When they visit flowers to feast on nectar, they spread pollen from plant to plant, helping to produce seeds, while their caterpillars are a vital part of the food chain, feeding birds such as robins, blue tits and sparrows.
However, factors including habitat loss mean numbers have fallen across three-quarters of British butterfly species during the past 40 years.
Gardeners can help plug this gap by providing food and shelter for butterflies at each stage of their magical transformation, from egg through to fully-fledged adult.
In particular, consider plants for caterpillars to munch on. Even if you spot a few leaf holes, it all contributes to a healthy, balanced ecosystem.
Help butterflies throughout the year by following this calendar from the RHS, which should tempt these colourful creatures to your garden…
SPRING
As the first butterflies of the year start to emerge, now is the perfect time to create a mini haven for wildlife. Try planting up a border with nectar-rich plants such as scabious, lavender and hebe, while not forgetting larval food like hops which can be grown up a fence.
Even if space is limited, consider filling a window box with butterflyfriendly aubrieta, forget-me-nots and French marigolds and positioning it in a sunny spot.
Keep your eyes peeled for species such as brimstone, comma, and orangetip, recording your sightings online at Nature’s Calendar (naturescalendar. woodlandtrust.org.uk).
SUMMER
Warmer temperatures see butterfly numbers peak, including exotic visitors such as the painted lady, which overwinters in North Africa.
Stop mowing a patch of lawn to let insect-friendly “weeds” flower and give meadow butterflies a chance to lay their eggs on the grasses.
Likewise for herbs, marjoram, sage and mint flowers are all great for butterflies and loved by the pretty little mint moth too. Look on food plants such as hops, holly and nasturtium for signs of caterpillar activity and avoid using any insecticides.
AUTUMN
Several species of butterfly – including brimstone, comma, small tortoiseshell and peacock – overwinter as adults and seek shelter in late autumn to lay dormant until the spring.
Others overwinter as eggs, caterpillars or pupae. Leave mature ivy to flower to offer a late nectar source (the flowers are also eaten by holly blue butterfly caterpillars) and fill some tubs or beds with sweet Williams to provide colourful nectar-filled flowers for butterflies come the spring.
WINTER
Make a list of the plants to grow next year to help fill any nectar gaps and lure in butterflies to lay their eggs.
Remember to leave a window ajar on garden sheds or outbuildings, so that small tortoiseshell and red admiral butterflies can shelter in them through winter, and delay the tidying of dead stems in borders until late winter to offer lots of safe overwintering spots.
● You can make a pledge to help butterflies, find out about planting a butterfly border or a butterfly box, download a free booklet and find out more about wildlife gardening on the Wild About Gardens website (wildaboutgardens.org.uk).