Milkweed at Enchanted Gardens, 2020
Why is milkweed so important?
Milkweed plants (family Asclepiadaceae) are the only food source for monarch butterfly caterpillars. However, milkweed has severely declined in North America due to drastic changes in land use or management, like agriculture and housing developments. Milkweed losses and other stressors are associated with declines in migratory monarch butterflies over the past 20 years. To compensate for the loss of milkweed, gardeners across North America are helping monarchs by planting milkweeds, and by keeping milkweeds safe from pesticides. Native varieties are especially important and difficult to grow. In 2019, we expanded our selection to include many native varieties whose seeds were carefully prepared with cold-stratification by the local non-profit Mustard Seed Farm & Market.
feeding our favorite caterpillars!
On top of being a delightful spectacle of nature, Monarch butterflies help keep world ecosystems in balance. As Texas is a main rest stop during their migration from Mexico, the Monarch butterflies depend on local gardeners to provide milkweed host plants for their young caterpillars.
#MILKWEED
MOVEMENT
2020
Our #MILKWEEDMOVEMENT promotes local community development and Monarch butterfly habitat restoration through the planting of milkweed. We are proud to donate all proceeds from the sales to local nonprofit organizations that raise awareness and provide support for families living with autism spectrum disorder. Join us by purchasing your milkweed from Enchanted, posting photos on social media using our hashtag, and helping to spread the word about our #MILKWEEDMOVEMENT.
We had a spectacular start of our movement in 2019! GrowerTalks/Green Profit magazine featured Enchanted Gardens on the May 2019 cover for our community-centric conservation approach using #MILKWEEDMOVEMENT. Proceeds from the sales of native/non-native milkweed sales raised more than $18,000.00 for local nonprofits. Our beneficiaries for 2019 included Hope for Three, The Monarch School, and Mustard Seed Farm & Market. With the busy spring season coming after a warm winter and monarch butterflies already fluttering about, Joey and Enchanted Gardens are hoping for an even more successful year in 2020.
Don’t miss our March event all about butterfly gardening! Our guest speaker Erin Mills is the current Director of the Cockrell Butterfly Center at the Houston Museum of Natural Science. There’s no better way to learn about attracting butterflies than at the center of Enchanted Gardens from Erin!
Why plant native milkweed species?
Native milkweed species are in tune with monarchs’ annual migration cycle. Each spring, native milkweeds emerge from dormancy as the monarchs leave their overwintering sites (either in Mexico, for monarchs in eastern North America, or in California, for monarchs in western North America). Monarchs migrate to breeding grounds across the U.S. and into southern Canada, where females lay eggs on milkweed throughout the spring and summer. In late summer, shorter days and cooler nights signal to developing monarchs that they should delay reproduction and prepare for migration to their overwintering grounds. These same environmental cues cause native milkweeds to turn yellow and die back for the year, encouraging the monarchs to migrate.