Category Archives: Butterflies

BEE BATH & BEYOND

Did you know bees need to drink water? They seek out shallow water sources like puddles and bee/bird baths.

You can help out our little pollinator friends (and a host of other wildlife) by adding a bee bath to your garden.

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This Bee Bath from Creative Woodcraft is designed to hold a shallow bowl (included).

Bees are not known as good swimmers, so it really helps if you place a stone or something similar in your bee bath– so they have somewhere safe to perch while they drink.

Bees and other beneficial insects — ladybugs, butterflies, and predatory wasps — all need fresh water to drink.

Placing the bee bath in your garden. (Put it near “problem plants” — those that get aphids, for example — and the beneficial insects that come to drink will look after them.)

Refresh the water daily, adding just enough to evaporate by day’s end.

If you keep it full, and in the same location, word will spread and the bees will come and be frequent visitors. It may take a couple of weeks for bees to discover the water source, but one they do, they will never forget where it is.

The benefit to you is that if bees are coming to drink in your yard, they’ll do you the return favor of pollinating your garden.

 

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Christmas Gifts For the Gardener

Looking for Garden Gifts? With our exclusive range of Unique Gifts for Gardeners you need look no further. Here are some suggestions from Creative Woodcraft.

BIRDS:

 Our bird products are designed to provide good homes and feeding options for their intended occupants and visitors! They also look great in any garden.blog

“Many of our products have been developed using the latest thinking from wildlife experts”

BEES: Leafcutter Bees – Gentle Bee

Amazing pollinator for summer food and flowers…

At Creative Woodcraft we provide a selection of products that will make raising Bumble Bees, Leafcutter Bees fun, easy and economical, so what are you waiting for . . . join us in our quest to encourage our native bees – and see your garden explode with blossoms as a result.

New Zealands only supplier of Leafcutter Bee Cocoons to the home gardener!

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Check out our custom-designed hand-crafted bee habitats and make your garden bee-friendly.

BUTTERFLIES:

Our butterfly products offer migrating and hibernating butterflies a helping hand by providing them a place to live.

Buterfly Shelter Feeder

Lovely butterfly houses, feeders and shelters for your garden!

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A butterfly-friendly garden

Prepare to salute the admirals

By Meg Liptrot

2:04 PM Sunday Oct 5, 2014

Red admiral

A white hebe proves irresistible to a passing red admiral butterfly. Photo / BOPT

Most gardeners don’t plan to grow caterpillar food, but our precious plants sometimes end up exactly that. In contrast, a butterfly gardener will intentionally grow food for caterpillars and is thrilled to find chomps taken from the plants in their garden, taking it as proof there are butterflies on the way.

Butterfly host plants are not always the most attractive additions to a garden and sometimes they’re downright hostile. Take nettles, for example. They were banished from our gardens for their antisocial ways but are essential food for a couple of our prettiest native butterflies.

Aotearoa is not known for its flamboyant butterflies, unlike those from tropical parts of the planet. Many of our native butterflies are small and their colours more subtle. Monarch butterflies are the exception, but you could consider these butterflies international citizens.

Red and yellow admirals have captured my heart and it is the biggest thrill to see one. Perhaps this species is called “admiral” because the butterfly looks like it is standing to attention.

Admiral butterflies jet about at speed as if they’re on a mission.

Butterfly threats

Habitat loss is probably the most important issue affecting butterfly populations, so having muehlenbeckia, tussocks and a few nettles in our landscaping is a great way to support our native butterflies. Flower gardens are on the come-back to support our honeybees and they are equally important for butterflies.

Buterfly Shelter Feeder

Click Here to buy a Butterfly Feeder/ shelter

Butterflies take a hit whenever wasp numbers are higher than usual and we had a long hot summer last year. Exotic paper wasps are a predator, as are German wasps. Some wasps are considered beneficial to an organic garden as they provide balance and prevent unwanted pest caterpillars from destroying cabbages. Many native wasps are solitary species and are not such a threat to butterflies.

A butterfly-friendly garden

Butterflies like a sheltered, sunny garden filled with a wide range of flowers and a water source.

I once visited a tropical garden in Yandina on the Sunshine Coast, and was fascinated by a large pale blue butterfly sipping water from a puddle on a sun-lit paving slab.

When designing your butterfly garden, place a flat stone or paver in a sunny and sheltered north-facing spot, with a shallow saucer of water, or a stone with depressions in it for water to sit in.

Some butterfly enthusiasts recommend placing rocks in a birdbath so butterflies have a place to land.

Plant a mix of annuals, perennials, grasses and shrubs in your garden to provide a range of heights and staggered flowering stages to provide nectar from spring to late autumn.

At our environment centre garden we planted a patch of nettles, purple-flowering scabiosa and ageratum under a small damson tree with Hebe stricta and muehlenbeckia growing in the shrubbery behind.

A short bamboo panel protects unsuspecting visitors from getting too close to the nettles.

This butterfly patch adjoins our bee garden, which is filled with flowers from spring through to autumn.

I was excited to see a yellow admiral for the first time in the garden last year. We often see monarchs as we have some swan plants, too.

Flowers that butterflies love

Butterfly gardens require plants with flowers a butterfly can land on easily, and florets to allow it to sip nectar with its long proboscis.

Butterfly garden favourites include: rudbeckia, hebe, buddleia, cineraria, echinacea, monarda (bee balm), ageratum, alyssum, dianthus, scabiosa, salvia, sedum, single marigolds, chrysanthemums, verbena, wallflower and zinnia. You can buy seeds – including butterfly plant mix, nettle, swan plant and other types of milkweed – from the Monarch Butterfly New Zealand Trust, which also offers a course on butterfly gardening.

Caterpillar food

An essential piece in a butterfly garden jigsaw is the planting of host plants for caterpillars.

Admiral butterflies lay their eggs only on nettle species.

The yellow admiral caterpillar favours the exotic nettle Urtica dioica; the red admiral prefers native nettles. The Oratia Native Plant Nursery stocks these plants.

Put on some gloves when planting them.

Monarch caterpillars prefer swan plants and other milkweeds.

Ringlet and tussock butterflies prefer native tussock from the Chionochloa and Poa genus.

For Copper butterflies plant Muehlenbeckia species.

Blue butterflies and their relatives rely on plants from the legume family such as clover and yellow-flowering trefoil.

Find out more about native butterflies and their host plants:forestandbird.org.nz/files/file/Butterfly%20Manual.pdf or nzbutterfly.info

Herald on Sunday

By Meg Liptrot

ReGeneration – NZ Pro range

Our ReGeneration – NZ Pro range has been developed to address the conservation challenges that we encounter on a daily basis.

Over the years our work with other organisations, that share our interest in conservation, has led us to develop this more specialist range of products.

The products are designed to meet the needs of professionals such as nature reserve managers, housing developers and ecologists. However many of the items, like our species specific nest boxes, can also be beneficial in residential gardens and educational settings.

The range includes:

  • Weta Motels and Lizard lodges.
  • A range of specialist bird nesting boxes.
  • Products to benefit endangered species such as bats.
  • Shelter solutions to help amphibians and insects.

Our team at Creative Woodcraft will be pleased to offer practical guidance on the best products and techniques to increase the wildlife value in your area of interest.

Please note: Prices shown are for lower volume purchases. However if you are interested in buying multiple units or a selection of products for building developments, conservation projects, education providers or similar, we are able to supply multiple items at a reduced trade rate*.

Please email [email protected] to discuss your requirements and request a free quotation.

*subject to terms & conditions.

Re-generation Pro Range

NATURALLY PASSIONATE & WANTING TO MAKE CHANGE

NATURALLY PASSIONATE & WANTING TO MAKE CHANGE
By Ian Morton  Creative Woodcraft HQ

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With a deep passion for gardening, nature and the environment at large – is it any wonder I combined my craftsman skills to create a job I love?

Every day, ideas and products are born at Creative Woodcraft HQ – as my wife and I continually look for ways to make change and help home gardeners nurture native wildlife throughout New Zealand.

It all started as a side-line hobby in 2010, soon became a full-time commitment. Before I knew it the demand for high quality and hand crafted garden products took off and I could see an important trend unraveling.

As the spotlight continues to shine on the importance of wildlife protection and conservation, significant projects such as the Halo Project are great reminders of working together for a mutual cause.

The Halo Project, spearheaded by the Morgan Family Foundation, is a journey we believe in wholeheartedly and while their goal is to establish Wellington as the real “native wildlife capital of New Zealand” – we see no reason why the entire country can’t do their bit and play their part in the development too.

Ultimately, New Zealand has a life-changing opportunity to participate and here at Creative Woodcraft – we want to be part of that and offer products and solutions to help Wellington achieve their Halo goal.

Based in South Canterbury, we are a family owned and operated business with the strong aim to provide a wide range of expertly constructed wildlife and garden products.

Since our very humble beginnings, Creative Woodcraft has grown in to one of the country’s largest specialist supplier of wildlife habitat, bird and garden related products and offer by far the widest range of nesting boxes, bird feeders and shelters to accommodate nature’s finest.

With a honorable team of committed experts constantly aiding our product design and endorsing what we stand for – Creative Woodcraft pledges to continue supporting native wildlife and has every desire to maintain further education among our existing and potential customer base.

Tui Feeder finishing touchesThe Halo Project is a great step forward to achieving a better environment for generations to follow and we are only too proud to continue pushing the key messages and products to ensure the protection of native birds and wildlife.

Its a pleasure to be a small part of supporting the Halo Project.

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