
Caption
Attract beautiful butterflies to your garden with a butterfly bush.
Grow a Garden That Butterflies Can’t Resist—Just Don’t Forget to Deadhead!
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Types
We are no longer recommending new plantings of the butterfly bush, given its categorization as an invasive in most of North America. Instead, we recommend using plants that better support the native landscape and food web, given our declining pollinator population. See alternative plants that attract butterflies.
Native Alternatives to Butterfly Bushes
Here are a few great flowering alternatives that also serve as host plants for caterpillars:
- Asters (Symphyotrichum)
- Beardtongue (Penstemon)
- Bee Balm (Monarda)
- Black-Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia)
- Columbine (Aquilegia)
- Coneflowers (Echinacea)
- Goldenrod (Solidago)
- Irises (Iris)
- Milkweed (Asclepias)
- Rhododendrons & Azaleas (Rhododendron)
- Spicebush (Lindera)
- Strawberries (Fragaria)
- Verbena (Verbena)
- Viburnum (Viburnum)
- Yarrow (Achillea)
See a list of host plants native to your area here: Native Plant Finder
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No dumb questions! By deadhead, we mean remove spent bloom of the butterfly bush. With this plant, you have a lot of flexibility. You can really cut it off with pruning shears anywhere behind the dead bloom. In the spring before new growth starts, we cut it back hard (to about a foot) to keep a compact shape. You want to cut back to the next live bud or growing point.
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Make sure to dry the wood chips before using. There should not be any problems with insects or diseases.