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by Claire Hagen Dole
Butterfly Garden Standby
Check a plant list in any butterfly gardening publication and you’re sure to find marigolds, especially French marigold (Tagetes patula). What makes this old-fashioned species so desirable to butterflies?
Compared to pompon-type hybrids, the French marigold remains close to
its wild relatives in
Mexico and Central America. A member of the composite family, it has
a daisy-like cluster of tubeflowers, surrounded by a single (or double)
row of petals. A medium-sized butterfly, such as an American Painted Lady,
can comfortably perch and sip nectar from the many florets.
Although a butterfly may be drawn into a garden full of bright orange
and yellow hybrids, it won’t
find easy access to nectar in the frilly blooms. Triploids, which are
infertile crosses between French and African (T. erecta), are unable
to set seed, so they can keep blooming for months. As you might suspect,
they have nothing to offer pollinators.
Out of the New World
Should you find yourself in a Mexican village for El Dia de los Muertos
(Day
of the Dead,
November 1st), be sure to visit the local cemetery. You’ll see elaborate
wreaths, festooned with
orange and gold marigolds, on the gravesites, as families hold candlelight
vigils to welcome the souls of departed loved ones.
There are about fifty species of annual or perennial marigolds from
the Southwestern U.S. to
Argentina, with most species occurring in Mexico and Central America.
Marigolds were taken to
Europe during the sixteenth century by Spanish conquerors. When Huguenot
refugees introduced
T. patula to England in 1573, the flower gained the name of
French marigold. Thomas Jefferson
planted French marigolds at Monticello in 1812, and they grow today
at Old Sturbridge Village in a recreated nineteenth-century garden.
The equally misleading name of African marigold may refer to the fact that T. erecta, returning with the Spaniards, became naturalized along the North African coast. It was introduced from Africa into France in 1535, when the armies of Emperor Charles V fought in Tunis. Burpee calls this species American marigold.
To further muddy the geographical waters, the genus Tagetes derives
from the Etruscan deity,
Tages, grandson of Jupiter, whose specialty was soothsaying.
A Versatile Plant
Used to heat, drought and lean soil, marigolds reward the most casual
of gardeners--perhaps a
reason for their enduring popularity. Seeds can be planted outdoors
when the soil has warmed, or started indoors and transplanted in early
summer. Space seedlings six to twelve inches apart; don’t overwater or
you’ll get leggy plants with fewer blooms. Plant in masses to attract butterflies,
and deadhead to prolong bloom.
Marigolds are used in household crafts and in cooking. Their flowers
can be boiled with alum
mordant to make a vivid yellow dye for wool and silk yarn. The citrus-scented
leaves of signet
marigold (T. tenuifolia, also known as T. signata), can
be dried for potpourri. Signet marigold’s
tiny, edible flowers brighten salads or decorate a cake.
And Mexican tarragon (T. lucida), also known as mint-scented
marigold, Mexican marigold mint
or cloud plant, has aromatic leaves that can be used as a substitute
for French tarragon or as a
stimulating tea.
Nematodes, Begone!
It’s as a natural insect repellent, though, that marigolds have gained
fame. They’ve long been
interplanted among vegetables and roses to deter whiteflies, aphids
and soil nematodes, and to
attract beneficial insects. While their strong smell gets credit for
repelling above-ground pests, the
action underground is more complex.
Chemicals in root secretions of marigolds, especially T. patula,
make nematodes ineffective by
inhibiting their detection of target plants (such as potato). You may
be able to rid the soil of
nematodes by densely planting an area with marigolds, then turning
the plants under and letting the soil lie fallow for the rest of the season.
At least a couple of seed companies promote the insecticidal qualities of marigolds. Burpee’s offers T. patula ‘Nema-gone’, a 4’ fast-growing plant with golden flowers. Richters sells Mexican marigold (T. minuta), dubbing it the ‘Weedkiller’. This 6’ plant, which rarely flowers in temperate zones, packs an even greater punch: in addition to its effectiveness against nematodes, mosquitoes and other pests, it has been shown to kill noxious weeds, such as ground elder and bindweed, that are growing close to its roots.
New Introductions
Thanks to the efforts of W. Atlee Burpee’s son, David, marigold offerings
have been greatly
expanded during this century. Of the 29 AAS (All-America Selections)
medals awarded to
marigolds from 1933-50, fourteen were Burpee introductions, including
the still-popular T. patula ‘Naughty Marietta’ (1947).
One of this year’s AAS Bedding Plant Award Winners is T. patula ‘Bonanza
Bolero’. Its large
(2-1/4") double flowers are distinctive because of their irregular
gold and red pattern, with the red markings on petal tips rather than as
vertical stripes. The plant reaches a foot high and up to two feet wide.
It is available from Park Seed.
Southern Exposure Seed Exchange offers T. patula ‘Tashkent #1’.
During a People-to-People trip to Uzbekistan in 1992, grower Bob Bell collected
seed from French marigolds growing next to an old Muslim school. One can
only guess how these flowers made their way halfway around the world, to
grow in obscurity until an heirloom aficionado appeared! ‘Tashkent #1’
is said to be
unusually fragrant, with numerous single-petalled flowers (to 2" across)
that are velvet mahogany
with a fine orange border and yellow center. As petals mature, they
change from mahogany to
orange-red. The plant grows to 16", with dense, deep-green foliage.
‘Pesche’s Gold’ is an intriguing selection of the usually-hybridized
African marigold, new this year
from Seeds of Change. Single golden petals are lightly ruffled along
the edges; blooms are large
(2-1/2") on stocky, broad-leaved plants (to 2’). The Seeds of Change
catalog notes a strikingly
similar offering (now unavailable) in a 1918 British catalog, Sutton’s
Seeds.
Marigold Choices for a Butterfly Garden
Tagetes lemmonii (mountain marigold). Bushy perennial (to 3’),
native to S. Ariz. canyons.
Clusters of 1" yellow flowers from Sept.-Mar. Attracts butterflies,
but strong, unpleasant odor
discourages browsers. However, Mountain Valley Growers calls its scent
tangerine or lemon-mint.
T. lucida (Mexican tarragon). Tender perennial from Mexico. Small gold flowers on anise-scented, toothed foliage; to 3’. Blooms in fall. Leaves used as seasoning or tea.
T. patula (French marigold). The premiere marigold for butterfly
gardens. Annual from Mexico.
Single or double petals (to 2-1/2") of golden, dark orange and brick
red. Many selections, often
with striped petals (‘Mr. Majestic’, ‘Striped Marvel’). Height 10"-24";
two 4’ selections offered by Seeds of Change.
T. tenuifolia (signet marigold). Also known as T. signata.
Annual from Mexico. Dwarf (8"-12")
with many tiny flowers and citrus-scented foliage. Not day-length sensitive
so blooms well into fall. Great container plant. Look for ‘Lemon
Gem’, ‘Orange Gem’ and ‘Paprika’.
Mail-order Nurseries:
Burpee Seeds, Warminster, PA 18974. (800) 888-1447; www.burpee.com.
Free catalog.
Mountain Valley Growers, Inc., 38325 Pepperweed Road, Squaw Valley,
CA 93675. (559)
338-2775; www.mountainvalleygrowers.com. Free.
Park Seed, 1 Parkton Ave., Greenwood, SC 29647-0001. (800) 845-3369;
www.parkseed.com. Free; ask for flower/vegetable catalog.
Richters, Goodwood, ON, Canada L0C 1A0. (905) 640-6677; www.richters.com.
Free.
Seeds of Change, PO Box 15700, Santa Fe, NM 87506-5700. (888) 762-7333;
www.seedsofchange.com. Free.
Southern Exposure Seed Exchange, PO Box 170, Earlysville, VA 22936.
(804) 973-4703;
www.southernexposure.com. $2.
Thompson & Morgan Inc., PO Box 1308, Jackson, NJ 08527-0308. (800)
274-7333;
www.thompson-morgan.com. Free.
Article by Claire Hagen Dole, Publisher/editor of Butterfly Gardeners'
Quarterly. #20, Spring
1999. Issue also includes "Photographing Butterflies and Flowers".
$2.50 ppd. from BGQ, PO
Box 30931, Seattle, WA 98103.
Return to Butterfly Gardeners' Quarterly Index
© copyright 1999 by Claire Hagen Dole; all rights reserved.