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Wildflower Mix for Butterflies

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

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This mix provides a refuge for butterflies. It is composed of perennial and annual flowers, many of which produce nectar-rich flowers. Some of the flowers provide a safe harbour for eggs, pupae, and caterpillars on their foliage. The seeds are broadcast like grass, from March to May or August to November. Choose a sunny spot, in well-prepared soil. An autumn sowing sees flowers bloom in the following spring.  
Height at maturity
1 m
Exposure
Sun
Annual / Perennial
Perennial
Sowing method
Direct sowing
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Sowing period March to May, August to November
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Flowering time May to October
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Description

A rich assortment of wild perennials and annuals, chosen for their particularly nectar-rich blooms or for their foliage that hosts and feeds the eggs, caterpillars, and chrysalises of several species of butterflies. They are sown directly in place in autumn or spring, in full sun or partial shade. They like well-loosened and prepared soil. The resulting meadow will bloom for several years, from spring to autumn, providing a true refuge for biodiversity.

 

This selection consists of 21 species of perennials and 4 species of annual or naturalised plants that are hardy and easy to grow in most of our regions. Annuals such as borage bloom 6 to 8 weeks after sowing, while perennials will produce their first flowers from the second year onwards. Autumn sowing produces flowers the following spring. Some, especially annuals, are easily naturalised by spontaneous seedlings, in ordinary, well-draining soil. The size of the plants varies between 80cm (31in) and 1m (3ft) in height.

The mix includes: blueberry, catnip, fennel, echium (viper), teaser, yarrow, Lythrum salicaria (loosestrife), trefoil, foxglove, swollen campion, Lychnis flos-cuculi (meadow carnation).

Our advice: this mixture will attract more butterflies if it is planted in the shelter of a varied hedge or a wall covered with climbers that will protect them from the wind.

The flower meadow blooms throughout summer, promotes biodiversity, and grows almost without care. It just needs watering if the weather is very dry. Mow 10 to 20cm (4 to 8in) from the ground in autumn. Ideal for bringing colour and life to sunny gardens, butterfly lovers will particularly appreciate this mix. It will also attract bees to fruit trees or the vegetable garden, encouraging pollination and fruit production.

 

Flowering

Flower colour multicoloured
Flowering time May to October
Bee-friendly Attracts pollinators

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour green

Plant habit

Height at maturity 1 m
Growth rate fast

Botanical data

Origin

Cultivar or hybrid

Planting and care

Sow from August to November or March to the end of May.

Turn over the soil. Refine, rake, and level the ground, and remove pebbles and weeds. Mix the contents of the packet with an equivalent volume of dry sand to obtain a better distribution of the seeds. Broadcast on the surface. Roll or pack the soil to bring the seeds into contact with the soil. Water and keep moist until emergence. 

Sow about 2.5g per m².

At the end of flowering (end of September or beginning of October), mow 10cm (4in) from the ground. Leave the clippings on the ground to encourage new seedlings to develop. 

Sowing period

Sowing period March to May, August to November
Sowing method Direct sowing

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow
Type of use Border
Hardiness Hardy down to -18°C (USDA zone 7a) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Any
Soil moisture Moist soil, Ordinary, well-worked.

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