What this garden supports in July
In season now
πCommon Eastern Bumble Bee
Bombus impatiens
Drawn to Common Milkweed
πSweat Bee
Halictus ligatus
Drawn to Golden Alexanders
π¦Monarch Butterfly
Danaus plexippus
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A Hortus garden Β· B3A 1K5, Canada area
Already a home for the Monarch Butterfly and 5 other species at risk
12 native plants in the B3A 1K5, Canada area.
πCommon Eastern Bumble Bee
Bombus impatiens
Drawn to Common Milkweed
πSweat Bee
Halictus ligatus
Drawn to Golden Alexanders
π¦Monarch Butterfly
Danaus plexippus
Map yours free and see who it brings back.
Start your own gardenDrawn to Common Milkweed
π¦Black Swallowtail
Papilio polyxenes
Drawn to Golden Alexanders
π¦Red Admiral
Vanessa atalanta
Drawn to Common Milkweed
π¦Red-winged Blackbird
Agelaius phoeniceus
Drawn to Common Milkweed
Likely visitors based on the plants in this garden and whatβs active this month.
Who this garden brings back
Because Thomas planted these, these named species have a place here.

A Monarch can only raise its young on milkweed. No milkweed, no Monarchs. It's that simple, and that fixable.

Disease wiped out most of them. A single bat eats thousands of insects a night, the ones night-blooming natives raise.

A bird that once nested on every farm, now threatened. Native plants feed the flying insects it catches on the wing.
It catches every meal on the wing. Native plants sustain the insects it lives on.

Its dusk call is going quiet. It hunts the night-flying moths that evening-primrose and milkweed raise.

Named for its haunting call, now seldom heard. It depends on the large moths native plants raise.

It raises its young only on plants in the carrot family. Golden Alexanders is its native one.
Photos: Photo by Derek Ramsey, GFDL 1.2 Β· Photo by Marvin Moriarty/USFWS, public domain Β· Photo by Malene Thyssen, CC BY-SA 3.0 Β· Photo by Andrew C, CC BY 2.0 Β· Photo by Greg Schechter, CC BY 2.0 Β· Photo by Dominic Sherony, CC BY-SA 2.0 Β· Photo by D. Gordon E. Robertson, CC BY-SA 3.0
support pollinators
feed birds
host caterpillars
Categories overlap. A single species often supports pollinators, birds, and caterpillars at once.
More than half the plants here are larval hosts, raising the caterpillars that baby songbirds depend on.
Something is in bloom in 7 of the 7 months of the growing season.


Supports a species at risk
Specialist host plant

