As I arrived home yesterday after a photography expedition (mission: liatris), I saw a butterfly's erratic flight above the tiny patch of garden I cultivate at sidewalk level. Its distinctive flight pattern, like a kite whose freedom is restrained by a string tugged at intervals, quickly identified it as a monarch. It had found the milkweed. I waited in the sun. Humidity 72%. She returned.
Swamp milkweed - Asclepias incarnata - forgives you if you do not plant it in a swamp, and it is ideal for narrow spaces. The monarchs love it. She came back again and again to deposit an egg at a time on the milkweed's leaves.
This is the first year since 2020 that I did not also plant balloon flower (aka hairy balls, cough), the tall southern African milkweed Gomphocarpus physocarpus, thinking that it, like the annual tropical milkweeds, might do monarchs more harm than good. It's a tough decision because that plant is spectacular visually in tight quarters, and makes passersby very happy.



The Man's mother planted swan plants Gomphocarpus , for her monarchs. She also planted loads of seeds to sell at the church garden show. And I'll sow seeds, too, but I'll grow them here.
ReplyDeleteHow interesting. Did she grow them in Australia? I did a quick dive and learned monarchs were introduced in the late 1800's to Oz. Are the seeds available in NZ? I'd be surprised (invasive potential).
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