Butterflies

Home Page Family Members Photographs Newsletters Family History Aspergers Miscellaneous Riseley Favourites Higgs Boson Busy Fingers Frogs Butterflies Pilgrim School

Mandy's Butterfly Page

Butterfly facts

Brightly coloured butterflies can be a welcome addition to your Backyard Wildlife Habitat landscape. To attract the greatest number of butterflies and have them as residents in your yard you will need to have plants that serve the needs of all life stages of the butterfly. They need a place to lay eggs, food plants for the larva (caterpillar), a place to form a chrysalis, and nectar sources for the adult.

Most adult butterflies live 10-20 days. Some, however, are believed to live no longer than three or four days, while others, such as overwintering monarchs, may live six months.

Over 700 species of butterflies are found in North America. Very few are agricultural pests. Adult butterflies range in size from the half-inch pigmy blue found in southern California to the giant female Queen Alexandra's birdwing of New Guinea, which measures about 10 inches from wing tip to wing tip. Butterfly tarsi or "feet" possess a sense similar to taste. Contact with sweet liquids such as nectar causes the proboscis to uncoil. Millions of shinglelike, overlapping scales give butterfly wings their color and patterns. Metallic, irridescent hues come from faceted scales that refract light; solid colors are from pigmented scales. During the time from hatching to pupating (forming the pupa or chrysalis), the caterpillar may increase its body size more than 30,000 times. The chrysalises or pupae of many common gossamer wings --a group of butterflies which includes the blues, hairstreaks and elfins -- are capable of producing weak sounds. By flexing and rubbing together body segment membranes, sounds are generated that may frighten off small predators and parasites.

Plants that attract butterflies

Adults searching for nectar are attracted to: red, yellow, orange, pink, or purple blossoms, flat-topped or clustered flowers short flower tubes.

BEARBUTTERa.gif (6697 bytes)
Short flower tubes allow the butterflies to reach the nectar with their proboscis. Nectar-producing plants should be grown in open, sunny areas, as adults of most species rarely feed on plants in the shade.

Many caterpillars are picky eaters. They rely on only one or two species of plants. The caterpillar of the giant swallowtail butterfly in the northeast and mid-Atlantic states feeds on just two native plant foods --northern prickly ash and hop tree. Others, such as the red-spotted purple, will feed on a variety of deciduous trees.

Necessities for a butterfly garden

Provide flowers to feed adults.

Dense "clusters" of small flowers such as zinnias, marigolds, tithonia, buddleia, milkweeds, verbenas, and many mint family plants generally work well.

Plant good nectar sources in the sun!

Your key butterfly nectar source plants should receive full sun from mid-morning to mid-afternoon. Butterfly adults generally feed only in the sun. If sun is limited in your landscape, try adding butterfly nectar sources to the vegetable garden.

No to insecticides!

Insecticides such as malathion, Sevin, and diazinon are marketed to kill insects. Don't use these materials in or near the butterfly garden or better, anywhere on your property. Even "benign" insecticides, such as Bacillus thuringiensis, are lethal to butterflies (while caterpillars).

Feed butterfly caterpillars.

If you don't "grow" caterpillars, there will be no adults. Bringing caterpillar foods into your garden can greatly increase your chances of attracting unusual and uncommon butterflies, while giving you yet another reason to plant an increasing variety of native plants. In many cases, caterpillars of a species feed on only a very limited variety of plants. Most butterfly caterpillars never cause the leaf damage we associate with some moth caterpillars such as bagworms, tent caterpillars, or gypsy moths.

Plants to attract butterflies …

Butterfly Bush Buddleia davidi Shrub
Late flowering Buddleia <Buddleia x weyerana "Sungold" Shrub
Candytuft Iberis amara annual
Devil's-bit Scabious Succinia pratensis perennial
Eupatorium E.micranthum, E.atropurpureum and E.purpureum perennials
Hebe Hebe spp. shrub
<Hemp Agrimony Eupatorium cannabinum perennial
Honesty Lunaria annua biennial
Ice Plant Sedum spectabile perennial
Cuckoo Flower Cardamine pratensis biennial
<Lavender Lavendula spp. shrub
Marjoram Origanum vulgare herb
Mint (flowering) Menthus herb
Michaelmas Daisy Aster novi-belgii perennial
Sweet Rocket Hesperis matronalis biennial
Sweet William Dianthus barbutus biennial
French Marigold Tagetes patula annual
Ivy Hedera helix Climbing Shrub
Garlic Mustard Alliaria petiolaris biennial
Privet Ligustrum vulgaris Native Shrub
Alder Buckthorn Frangula alnus Small tree
Verbena bonariensis tender perennial
 

Bedford Butterfly Park

Site History

butflanim_e0.gif (5663 bytes)

The site now occupied by The Bedford Butterfly Park is High Farm, Wilden and has a lot of local historical and archaeological links together with mentions in the County Records and other Historical Archives of the area.

As part of the site suitability work, the County Archaeological Team undertook a site dig and the Bedford Butterfly Park Team are carrying out further research through County Records and other historical sources.

Evidence has been found of settlements on High Farm as far back as the Iron Age. This has been supported by finds during the archaeological dig of pottery dating from this period, some identified as being made at Harrold Priory 6 miles to the north west. Bedford Butterfly Park is in fact approx. 100m from the the main Harrold to Biggleswade trade route which was an important and well trodden path at that time.

Records before the 19th century are sketchy as deals and transfer of ownership were generally done by word of mouth and rarely recorded. However with the 1817 Enclosure Act records became a legal requirement and these give the first documentary ownership evidence found so far in the quest for the sites history. At that time approx 30 acres of land were known as High Farm and this was owned by John Hickman, Yeoman of Cardington (to the south east of Bedford) . There are believed to be links between the Hickman family, High Farm and the Whitbread family and this is a subject of the ongoing investigations.

High Farm was purchased by the Beesley family around the turn of the 20th century. In the 1940's the farm was taken over by Tom and Nancy Beesley and run as a small holding until 1996 when the current 11 acre site was sold at auction as part of their estate. Many of their relatives still live in the village.

An important feature of this site is that the wild flower hay meadows have never been subjected to modern chemicals or a tractor and plough but show the tell tale ridge and furrow indicative of a traditional horse drawn plough.

The current owner bought the land and farmhouse at Peacocks Auction room in 1996 and started the long process of planning, building and developing the Bedford Butterfly Park. This included:- the demolition of the original farmhouse which was beyond repair; renovation and rebuilding of the outbuildings using traditional building methods (with the professional services of Mark Gascoyne, Tree Historic Ltd); an archaeological dig by the County Archaeological Service; the design and construction of the main building and landscaping the western field; planting over 700 trees and developing the nature trail around the eastern hay meadow; the recruitment of staff and the final setting up of the flight area and bugs room ready for the opening (to mention just some of the effort and activities involved to bring this to fruition).

The doors to The Bedford Butterfly Park finally opened to the public in May 1999.

http://www.bedford-butterflies.co.uk/

Top Of Page