Bug of the Week: White Butterfly on Rosemary

Even though it’s November, we still have butterflies in our yard.  white-butterfly-light-on-wings_0243The rosemary is flowering, and it attracted this white butterfly.

white-butterfly_0271The butterfly spent several minutes visiting the flowers, probing or feeding in each one.

white-butterfly-sideAren’t the stripy antennae with the yellow tips fun?

Taking a few minutes, it is possible to see even more butterflies. A duskywing skipper was on the same rosemary plant at the same time as this white, and tiny blue butterflies were fluttering around a nearby fairy duster. Queen and monarch butterflies commonly visit our milkweeds, and giant swallowtails glide by the citrus trees in the back. The snout butterflies and painted ladies seem to prefer the puff-ball flowers on the willow acacia.

In fact there’s no need to visit a butterfly exhibit because, with the proper flowering plants, the butterflies come to us.

For more information, see our previous posts during butterfly gardening with children week.

butterfly-gardening-with-children

Five great nectar plants for butterflies

Growing list of children’s books about moths and butterflies

moth-and-butterfly-books-for-children-list

 

2 Comments

  1. Karen

    Great pictures! I’m definitely going to consider butterflies as I plan my gardens here.

  2. Roberta

    Karen,

    It only takes a plant or two to attract butterflies (in our experience.)

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