What this garden supports in July
In season now
πCommon Eastern Bumble Bee
Bombus impatiens
Drawn to New England Aster, Dense Blazing-Star
πSweat Bee
Halictus ligatus
Drawn to Black-Eyed Susan
πEastern Carpenter Bee
Xylocopa virginica
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A Hortus garden Β· M6P 1C9, Canada area
Already a home for the Monarch Butterfly and 13 other species at risk
42 native plants in the M6P 1C9, Canada area.
πCommon Eastern Bumble Bee
Bombus impatiens
Drawn to New England Aster, Dense Blazing-Star
πSweat Bee
Halictus ligatus
Drawn to Black-Eyed Susan
πEastern Carpenter Bee
Xylocopa virginica
Map yours free and see who it brings back.
Start your own gardenDrawn to Cardinal Flower, Foxglove Beardtongue +2 more
πLeafcutter Bee
Megachile rotundata
Drawn to Black-Eyed Susan, Pale Purple Coneflower +1 more
π¦Monarch Butterfly
Danaus plexippus
Drawn to New England Aster, Dense Blazing-Star
π¦Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Papilio glaucus
Drawn to Cardinal Flower, Purple Joe-Pye-Weed +1 more
π¦Black Swallowtail
Papilio polyxenes
Drawn to New England Aster, Dense Blazing-Star
π¦Painted Lady
Vanessa cardui
Drawn to New England Aster, Black-Eyed Susan
Likely visitors based on the plants in this garden and whatβs active this month.
Who this garden brings back
Because wildstrawperri 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.

This endangered butterfly can only raise its young on New Jersey Tea. Plant the shrub, save the butterfly.

Once common across eastern North America, now almost gone. It feeds on wild bergamot and asters, flowers any yard can grow.

The bees it relies on need these same native blooms. Plant for one, and you feed both.

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 feeds entirely on flying insects. Every native flowering patch is more food in the air it hunts.

A grassland bird losing its grasslands. Native bunchgrasses bring back the insects and cover it needs.

A bubbling song of summer meadows, now threatened. Native grasses rebuild the habitat it raises its young in.

It perches on tall spruces and sallies out to catch flying insects. Native blooms keep its prey in the air.

It needs goldenrod and asters to fatten up before winter. The late-summer blooms most gardens are missing.

A once-common bumble bee in decline. Beebalm and columbine are among its favourites.

Its slow 'pee-a-wee' call is heard less each year. It needs the flying insects native plants support.

Our native ladybugs are being pushed out. Native plants give them aphids to hunt and cover to overwinter.
Photos: Photo by Derek Ramsey, GFDL 1.2 Β· Photo by Benny Mazur, CC BY 2.0 Β· Photo by USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab, public domain Β· Photo by Ivar Leidus, CC BY-SA 4.0 Β· Photo by Marvin Moriarty/USFWS, public domain Β· Photo by Malene Thyssen, CC BY-SA 3.0 Β· Photo by John, CC BY 2.0 Β· Photo by Ken Thomas, public domain Β· Photo by Paul Engel, CC BY-SA 4.0 Β· Photo by Mike's Birds, CC BY-SA 2.0 Β· Photo by Judy Gallagher, CC BY 2.0 Β· Photo by Dan Pancamo, CC BY-SA 2.0 Β· Photo by Hectonichus, 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.