• Portfolio
  • About
  • Collections
  • Log In
Artwork Archive Logo
  • Discovery

Tamara Dimitri

Connecticut

Message
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Collections
Butterfly Weed by Tamara Dimitri
  • Tamara Dimitri
  • Butterfly Weed
  • Inquire
  • Facebook logo facebook Share this blog post via Facebook
  • Twitter logo twitter Share this blog post via Twitter
  • LinkedIn logo linkedin Share blog post via LinkedIn
  • Email logo email Share this blog post via email
Prev
Next

Asclepias tuberosa, Butterfly Weed, is most often a distinctive bright orange but there is some variation in flower color, from deep red-orange to yellow. This distinctive color and the absence of the typical milky white sap that other Milkweed species have make identification easy. The leaves are somewhat narrow, up to 1” and tapered, with no stem and dark green in color.

This is a great Milkweed for a sunny location in a dry area. Mature plants in ideal locations can make as many as 20 stems at an average height of 2’. The vivid orange color, low mounded profile, and ability to attract and sustain butterflies make this plant a well-known landscape favorite for all types of gardens. Like all species in the Asclepias genus, Asclepias tuberosa is one of the larval host plants for the monarch butterfly.

Butterfly Weed needs a drier, well-drained location to successfully seed into and grow well. In older plants the long tap root can extend down many feet. Due to this deep, drought-tolerant tap root, it can be late to emerge in the spring, especially in northern climates, so be patient. Butterfly Weed can be transplanted if dug carefully during dormancy but if the tap root breaks off, they will regrow. *The dormant tap root you receive may be difficult to tell which end is up. There is usually a noticeable end that is not trimmed; that is the bottom of the root. When in doubt, you can plant it approx 3" deep, on its side. It will reach for light/warmth and straighten out on its own.

  • Collections: Plant Life - backyard gardens

Other Work From Tamara Dimitri

False Sunflower by Tamara Dimitri
False Sunflower
Astibe by Tamara Dimitri
Astibe
Peony by Tamara Dimitri
Peony
day lily by Tamara Dimitri
day lily
Tall Phlox by Tamara Dimitri
Tall Phlox
Endless Summer Blue Hydrangea by Tamara Dimitri
Endless Summer Blue Hydrangea
Eastern Prickly Pear cactus by Tamara Dimitri
Eastern Prickly Pear cactus
Siberian Iris by Tamara Dimitri
Siberian Iris
Obedient Plan by Tamara Dimitri
Obedient Plan
Intersecting Horizons - Mountains and Sea by Tamara Dimitri
Intersecting Horizons - Mountains and Sea
See all artwork from Tamara Dimitri
 

Powered by Artwork Archive