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Airplanes In The Garden -- Kids, Butterflies, and Summer Fun
comments (2) May 31st, 2011 in blogs
Parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, and camp counselors! We haven’t hit the solstice yet, but Memorial Day is the unofficial start of summer. Time to think about what the kids will be up to for the next few months. Would you like to divert them away from mind-numbing, thumb-mashing video games and get them into the garden for some good clean dirty fun? Then flip open a copy of Joan Z. Calder’s book, Airplanes In The Garden: Monarch Butterflies Take Flight, and get ready for action.
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The story opens with pigtailed Bonnie delighting in a small squadron of graceful monarchs wafting through her family’s garden. When her mom asks her what she’s up to, Bonnie replies, “Mom, there are airplanes in the garden!” Her fertile imagination sees the flowers as airports, where butterflies pick up “babies and moms and dads to take them on a trip.”
Mom seems to have a pretty good handle on butterfly life cycles (she must have been the star pupil in her entomology class), and explains to her daughter how momma butterflies lay tiny white eggs under milkweed leaves. And how little, striped caterpillars emerge, turn into chrysalises, only to reappear as delicate butterflies.
Bonnie picks out two favorites, names them Sergio and Stanley, and follows their metamorphosis until the day her bewinged friends take flight, filling the garden with “clouds of flapping wings.”
Here, Bonnie’s story ends, but the book continues with maps showing the migratory routes monarchs follow at different times of the year, and a page loaded with fascinating facts about these wonders of nature. (Bonus for grown-ups: “Monarchs taste with their feet” is the ideal icebreaker at swanky cocktail parties.) There are links to useful resources, including the PBS NOVA episode, “Journey of the Butterflies”, and the University of Kansas’ Monarch Watch website.
If you find yourself motivated to start a butterfly garden, the book ends with instructions for growing your own butterfly haven, including the best food plants for adults (nectar-producing) and caterpillars (they’re leaf-munchers).
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As engaging and well-written as the book is, it’s Cathy Quiel’s giddily rendered, quirky water-colors that will keep readers poring over each page. Her colors are enchanting and rich, and every page is populated with smile inducing little “asides”, like a ladybug flight attendant balancing a cheese sandwich on her back.
I want to see Airplanes in the Garden in homes, libraries, classrooms, and nurseries. When that’s done, I hope to hear about well-loved, slightly soiled, weathered copies of this book finding their way outdoors and into garden. And when the magic is complete, the soft fluttering of delicate, but hard-working orange and black wings.
| SAN FRANCISCO IN JULY!!!
If you find yourself in San Francisco in mid-July don't miss two (count them, TWO!) opportunities to hear me speak. I'll be at the San Francisco Conservatory of Flowers, Thursday evening, July 14, presenting a live version of Crimes Against Horticulture: When Bad Taste Meets Power Tools. To top it off, the Conservatory will be in the midst of a Wicked Plants display, inspired by bestselling author Amy Stewart's book. Two days later (Saturday, July 16, at 11 am), I'll dazzle attendees with a planting design workshop at the legendary Flora Grubb Gardens, only the coooooolest nursery in this part of the galaxy. (Read my recent article) More details to come, but mark your calendar and spread the word. I'll be giving away free copies of Fine Gardening Magazine and would love the opportunity to say hello in person. |
posted in: billy goodnick, santa barbara, butterflies, calder, butterflies in the garden
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Enter the world of sustainable gardening with Billy Goodnick's "Cool Green Gardens" blog. Billy lives in Santa Barbara, CA, and delivers a West Coast perspective on landscape design that will translate into your own backyard. Check out CGG for great ideas on reducing your impact on the environment and creating a landscape that is an extension of your home.







Comments (2)
I love the review. My grandchildren are thrilled with the book and all my co-workers love it too. Great gift for grandma and grandpa to give. Nice keepsake for baby gifts.
Junbug
Posted: 9:53 am on June 1st