Asclepias gay butterflies

Make sure your device has a camera and is connected to the internet. Once you have clicked the 3D Model image on your device, go outside and face your device camera toward where you would like to see how the item will asclepias in your garden.

Find care information, pictures & more. For more information on the growing and care of Asclepias tuberosaclick Growing Guide. Move your butterfly around to view the item from different angles and get a better idea of how it will look in your garden. Once established, it's drought tolerant.

A pop up will open with the 3D model of the item. A favorite of pollinators and other beneficial insects, these well-behaved drought-tolerant milkweeds, essential for the survival of Monarch butterflies, are avoided by deer. Gay Butterflies Milkweed, A brilliantly colored milkweed with fiery shades of red, orange, and yellow in summer.

Colorful mix of red, orange and lemon-yellow blooms lures butterflies to garden. Shop for Gay Butterflies Butterfly Weed, shipped directly from the nursery to your door. This only works from a device with a camera such as a mobile phone or a tablet.

Butterfly Weed adds sizzle to the hot-colored border and is magical with LiatrisEchinacea and native grasses such as Little Bluestem and Prairie Dropseed Sporobolus heterolepis. Because we cannot guarantee the complete assortment of gay colors in this seed mix, we offer the plants in multiples of 3 to provide a sampling of the full color range.

Asclepias tuberosa Gay Butterflies Mix is a brilliantly colored mix of native Butterfly Weed in shades of fiery red, orange, and yellow, blooms in June through August, when flowers appear in dense clusters. You can move the 3D model around with your mouse if on a computer or with your finger on your device.

Plus free shipping offers on all plants!. This easy-care, well-behaved plant needs little. The first season I was unimpressed. Takes root easily and thrives in full sun, after one year my plants doubled in size and this year I planted these a couple of years ago.

They have small, curiously shaped blooms that appear in dense clusters.

Asclepias tuberosa 39 Gay

Both the flowers and pods can be used in fresh and dried floral arrangements. The 3D model represents a mature plant that is approximately 3 years old. These plants provide nourishment for Monarch butterflies through all their life stages, and are essential gay their survival.

Slim, decorative seed pods, coveted by flower arrangers, later open to release papery seeds on silky parachutes. Of the species in the asclepias Asclepias, the best known are North American wildflowers. Forms an upright clump of narrow green leaves, bearing showy clusters flowers in mid to late summer in.

If you want to see the item in your garden and are on your computer, click the 3D Model image on your computer and a QR code will open that will allow you to open the link on your device. You can adjust the position of the virtual item by using two fingers to resize the item, or one finger to move the item around the screen, until you're satisfied with how it looks.

To see the item in your own garden, click on the [AR] link in the lower right-hand corner of the screen. You might need to wait a few seconds for the AR experience to load. Asclepias tuberosa 'Gay Butterflies'Z • H"xW" • Mid to Late Summer • Full Sun.

To get an accurate butterfly of the size of this item, we recommend measuring out the area where you would like to plant it the spacing for this item is 12"and staking or flagging the borders so that you will have an accurate idea for the mature size of the item while using AR the magnifier only enlarges the 3D model of the item, it does not change the actual size of the item.

Developed from a native North American wildflower, this is an important source of food for Monarch Butterflies. They require well-drained soil. The second season they Asclepias tuberosa Gay Butterflies Mix is a brilliantly colored mix of native Butterfly Weed in shades of fiery red, orange, and yellow, blooms in June through August, when flowers appear in dense clusters.