Enjoying a garden in motion
I have always been fascinated with hummingbirds. Their
entertaining flight patterns, beautiful colors and captivating
curiosity make them a welcome guest in my garden.
When I was 9 years old, I had my first hummingbird encounter. A
pair of hummingbirds built a nest in the tree outside my bedroom
window. The nest was tiny and perfectly round. The eggs looked like
little white pearls. The parents were so attentive and diligent about
family life.
I often wondered if they got tired: building a nest, hatching the
eggs, and teaching the babies how to fly. It was an around the clock
job. Sound familiar?
Years later, when I could create a garden of my own, adding plants
that would attract hummingbirds to my garden was a given. And, in
beckoning the hummingbirds, along came butterflies -- an added bonus.
So in my yard with the birds and the bees and the flowers and the
trees ... I have a garden in motion.
There is some methodology about including plants that attract
hummingbirds and butterflies. Hummingbirds eat about half their
weight every day in nectar and small insects. Butterflies also need
nectar plants for nourishment. It’s a natural combination that you
can easily create in your own backyard.
Adult butterflies are attracted to brightly-colored flowering
plants and shrubs. Many of these Southern California standards may
already be planted in your garden. Blue or white agapanthuses (lily
of the Nile) are hardy perennials that thrive in almost any
condition. Snapdragons are readily available in most nurseries and
are easy-to-grow. Other familiar and showy annuals like cosmos,
sunflowers and delphiniums attract flying friends.
Shrubs that guarantee visitors include Buddleja davidii, or more
commonly known as butterflybush. Buddleja are vigorous growers,
respond well in less than perfect conditions and offer long spikes of
purple or white flowers. Their foliage is a gray green that is a nice
addition to almost any garden scheme.
Buddleja bloom on new growth, so a dramatic pruning is necessary
every fall. Butterflies just can’t help dancing over the leaves and
landing on the long spires of flowers.
Hummingbirds are fairly simple to figure out. If it’s bright, they
like it, which explains why they’re willing to gather around a feeder
of red-tinted sugar water.
Hummingbirds like fuchsia, hibiscus, lantana and all citrus trees.
If you can plant these perennials, shrubs and trees near a window in
your house, you will be rewarded with a constant parade of airborne
beauties.
If you have enough patience, sit in your yard surrounded by
flowering plants. Chances are that you too will have a visitor.
Our youngest child, Mary Rose, has the uncanny ability to attract
all kinds of butterflies. She stands in the yard with her arms
outstretched and never fails to have a butterfly land on her. Maybe
it’s the name, maybe patience is the gift, but Mary Rose is our
ultimate magnet.
Her brother and sister think it’s because she’s weird enough to
stand in the garden perfectly still for long amounts of time. I think
it’s her affinity for anything creative. And there’s no doubt, she is
colorful enough in stature and personality to attract even the shyest
creature that flutters by.
She is my last reminder of the family of hummingbirds that lived
in the pink crape myrtle tree outside the window of my childhood
home. Only this time it’s my long hours of nesting, feeding and
nurturing that will teach her to not only fly, but also to stop and
enjoy the beauty of nature.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs
Sundays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.