11 Plants To Attract Butterflies To Your Garden | Best Plants For Butterflies

11 Plants To Attract Butterflies To Your Garden | Best Plants For Butterflies

11 Plants To Attract Butterflies To Your Garden | Best Plants For Butterflies

In today’s video, we want to take you through how to attract butterflies with these plants in your garden! It is important to learn how to attract more butterflies to your garden.

So if you are looking to attract more butterflies to your butterfly garden, then here are the best plants to attract butterflies with!

There are many types of plants that will attract butterflies, but here are the easiest plants that bring butterflies to the garden.
———————————————————————————————————————-
DIG INTO THESE AWESOME PRODUCTS!

“As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.”

🌸18 Variety – Perennial Flower Seeds for Attracting Butterflies 👉 https://amzn.to/3yuuhxD
🌸Wildlife World Butterfly House and Feeder 👉 https://amzn.to/3FguU1E
🌸Butterfly Feeder/Nectar Combo 👉https://amzn.to/3JvILna

✨ Want to support the channel? BUY US SOME DIRT! 👉 https://buymeacoffee.com/whenyougarden

———————————————————————————————————————-
📖 READ FULL ARTICLE: https://www.whenyougarden.com/11-plants-to-attract-butterflies-to-your-garden/
———————————————————————————————————————-
For more videos like this be sure to SUBSCRIBE.
►►► https://bit.ly/2ZesATr👈​

#whenyougarden​​ #gardening​ #plantsforbutterflies #butterflygarden

♛ Stay Connected ♛
■ Website: https://whenyougarden.com​
■ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/whenyougarden
■ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whenyougarden
■ Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/whenyougarden
———————————————————————————————————————-
00:00 – Intro
00:37 – 11 Plants To Attract Butterflies To Your Garden
01:04 – 1. Butterfly Bush
01:45 – 2. Blazing Star Flowers
02:23 – 3. Coneflower or Echinacea
03:03 – 4. Black-Eyed Susan
03:29 – 5. Lavender
03:53 – 6. Lantana
04:32 – 7. Phlox
05:09 – 8. Swamp Milkweed
05:47 – 9. Agapanthus
06:30 – 10. Aster Flower
06:56 – 11. Hollyhocks
07:34 – Final Thoughts!

25 Comments

  1. We have had a butterfly bush for around 15 years. It gets big every year. Around 6-8 feet. We cut it back each spring or fall to around 3 feet. It has not spread much at all. I don’t see where it is considered invasive by others. It’s in full Sun about 6 hours a day. Butterflies love it.

  2. 6:15
    Agapanthus is a temperate to subtropical genus. Too hot in SoFla for Agapanthus (try Society Garlic) and too cold up North (try Allium).
    Agapanthus does best in the Southern states where it gets cold enough, but the ground doesn’t freeze.

  3. So sad there’s not a single flower I’ve seen in Philippines locality in this list. But, it still inspiring me again to at least try to arrange , and bring back to life our Urban literally potted garden 🪴🌱🌿.
    Just wanna to see butterflies often, since having butterfly garden is impossible for me to maintain, as a touch-and-go person 🌺-🦋-🦋-🌻.

  4. Try ‘Miss Molly’ medium to dark pink/red or Miss Violet butterfly bush. grows 4-5 tall and wide. Both are have sterile seeds so it is not self seeding or invasive.
    Another is New York Ironweed. It grow over 6ft and have a dark purple or magenta color flower cluster.

  5. Butterfly bush has been labeled as invasive in many States.
    Several of your flower choiices are poor for North America.

  6. Hollyhock is a biennial that readily self-seeds, so it appears to be perennial. There is also a shorter flower that looks like a hollyhock, that is perennial: mallow (Malva alcea). Does this one also attract butterflies? I don’t know.

  7. It’s it truly sad to see someone recommending Butterfly bush given all the information out there indicating otherwise.

  8. Please only plant milkweed native to your area. This is especially important because the monarch butterfly is 90% extinct and still facing all kinds of difficulties to overcome if its ever to recover. Planting swamp milkweed in non-native areas disrupts the natural migration of monarchs and further harms the species.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*