Need Some Inspiration For A Butterfly Friendly Garden?
Take a trip to RHS Wisley in the UK for an amazing butterfly experience – you won’t forget it!
RHS Wisley is one of the largest gardens in the UK – with an absolutely huge temperate and tropical glasshouse – and they are going to fill it with butterflies!
I have visited many smaller scale butterfly houses when abroad – but this is on the scale of something magnificent – and will have species from all over the globe including the absolutely huge Blue Morpho butterfly from Central and South America which can reach up to 8 inches across!
Native UK species don’t grow quite that big and none are irridescent blue – but we do have some very colourful and delicate species that you can attract right into your garden like the bright yellow Brimstones, the highly decorative orange and black Marsh Frittilaries, tiny blue Hairstreaks and the huge black and white Swallowtails with a wingspan of over 3 inches!
So, all you need to attract some into your own garden, are the right garden plants – and help is at hand.
Butterfly Conservation, UK:
This UK based charity are the best source of information on butterflies you can get for native species – and their president is none other than the great Sir David Attenborough.
Members of the Society are going to be at Wisley in the glasshouses to help you identify the different species in the display – but also those that you find in your gardens year after year – or want to find in your garden from now on!
There will be information boards all around the site helping you to identify the essential plants that butterflies need as adults, but also as caterpillars.
Why Butterflies?
Many people forget that caterpillars are a huge food source for many of our garden wild birds – such as blue tits and robins – and that the more adult butterflies you attract to your garden through the year - the more birds their offspring can feed keeping you garden filled with life at all times.
Also, butterflies are an important pollinater for plants too and they are the second largest pollinaters after bees. Plants such as sunflowers, asters and daisies all depend on butterflies to create seeds – and they are in the second largest group of plants on Earth, so it’s an important link. And a key one if you want your plants to set strong seeds and spread across your gardens.
Visiting this one off spectacle could be the spark that generates a keen interest in butterflies and back gardens in yourself or your children – and could really make a difference to struggling species in your area.
After all it is the International Year of Biodiversity – so why not get things started with a great day out!
Details:
RHS Wisley is in Surrey, England and is open all year round as one of the UK’s largest public gardens, with woodlands, water features, flower-filled avenues, sculptures, a library, and a huge garden centre.
The butterfly display is on now until the 28th of February 2010 and is free as part of the normal entrance fee. Children under 6 are free, and pre-booked groups get a discount – so make sure you take the whole family with you – and some friends thrown in. Get everyone involved.