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Wild Cherry Farm
Shop
Species of Concern
Bees
Specialist Bees
Threatened or Endangered Bees
Butterflies
American Lady
Baltimore Checkerspot
Black Swallowtail
Common Buckeye
Eastern Tailed-Blue
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Giant Swallowtail
Great Spangled Fritillary
Hummingbird Clearwing
Monarch
Mourning Cloak
Pearl Crescent
Red-Spotted Purple
Silver-Spotted Skipper
Spicebush Swallowtail
Spring Azure
Viceroy
Wild Indigo Duskywing
Blog
Plant Search
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Shop
Species of Concern
Folder: Bees
Back
Specialist Bees
Threatened or Endangered Bees
Folder: Butterflies
Back
American Lady
Baltimore Checkerspot
Black Swallowtail
Common Buckeye
Eastern Tailed-Blue
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail
Giant Swallowtail
Great Spangled Fritillary
Hummingbird Clearwing
Monarch
Mourning Cloak
Pearl Crescent
Red-Spotted Purple
Silver-Spotted Skipper
Spicebush Swallowtail
Spring Azure
Viceroy
Wild Indigo Duskywing
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Plant Search
Shop Native Plants Bird’s Foot Violet (Viola pedata)
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Bird’s Foot Violet (Viola pedata)

$6.00
In Production

Such a sweet little plant! The flowers attract native bees, small butterflies, and skippers. Apparently, this violet attracts more butterflies compared to others because its face tilts up (illinoiswildflower.info). It is the host plant to the Great Spangled Fritillary and basically any other Fritillary in the area and 30 other species of butterflies and moths in our area (nwf.org). Bird’s Foot Violet is not as vigorous as our Common Violet, in fact, it’s a bit pickier about its placement than others. It needs very well-drained soil and does not do well with competition. In optimal conditions, and if you are lucky, it will self-seed readily.

Photo credit: Joshua Mayer (1), John Blair (2-3)

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Such a sweet little plant! The flowers attract native bees, small butterflies, and skippers. Apparently, this violet attracts more butterflies compared to others because its face tilts up (illinoiswildflower.info). It is the host plant to the Great Spangled Fritillary and basically any other Fritillary in the area and 30 other species of butterflies and moths in our area (nwf.org). Bird’s Foot Violet is not as vigorous as our Common Violet, in fact, it’s a bit pickier about its placement than others. It needs very well-drained soil and does not do well with competition. In optimal conditions, and if you are lucky, it will self-seed readily.

Photo credit: Joshua Mayer (1), John Blair (2-3)

Such a sweet little plant! The flowers attract native bees, small butterflies, and skippers. Apparently, this violet attracts more butterflies compared to others because its face tilts up (illinoiswildflower.info). It is the host plant to the Great Spangled Fritillary and basically any other Fritillary in the area and 30 other species of butterflies and moths in our area (nwf.org). Bird’s Foot Violet is not as vigorous as our Common Violet, in fact, it’s a bit pickier about its placement than others. It needs very well-drained soil and does not do well with competition. In optimal conditions, and if you are lucky, it will self-seed readily.

Photo credit: Joshua Mayer (1), John Blair (2-3)

Life Cycle: Perennial

Sun Exposure: Full, Partial (Preference is Full Sun)

Soil Moisture: Medium, Medium-Dry, Dry (Prefers it dry)

Height: 3 inches

Plant Spacing: 4-6 inches

Bloom Time: April-June

Bloom Color: Purple

Advantages: Caterpillar Favorite, Pollinator Favorite, Bird Favorite, Great Landscaping Plant

Host Plant: Great Spangled Fritillary and 30 other species of butterflies and moths in our area (nwf.org)

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734-498-2652

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