Pipevine needs caterpillars
A dark butterfly flying around the pipevine outside my study window caught my attention. Ooh, might it be a pipevine swallowtail?
Our pipevine (Aristolochia macrophylla) definitely needs some caterpillars this year.
We didn't have any last year, and it's a strong grower.
Planted specifically as a host plant for pipevine swallowtails, it coexists with Carolina jessamine on this trellis, producing large green heart-shaped leaves and spreading vigorously. Its small greenish purple flowers, shaped like a pipe, appear in mid-spring (late April-early May for us).
The afternoon light was harsh, but I was able to determine that it was a female pipevine swallowtail, depositing eggs on young leaves (which are preferred).
Hooray!
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiTzHvlWU4D2JzZxx5d_Emd12dKThjjON3TnCOkTQp2mBcJN195mTY6oZHQ6ehqwc9oJ6RvW2d3X0SVJDH7IrjxjEq61JwPzxIPR_UnIrt0tEIoV7OXeTi61O8c_IJ2KHcMIeFd3HX49K0/s400/Pipevine-needing-caterpilla.jpg)
We didn't have any last year, and it's a strong grower.
Planted specifically as a host plant for pipevine swallowtails, it coexists with Carolina jessamine on this trellis, producing large green heart-shaped leaves and spreading vigorously. Its small greenish purple flowers, shaped like a pipe, appear in mid-spring (late April-early May for us).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj7A_zHDIi0aIsAdOTcdeQnb3zEOVh_NIM5jzO5j6-8FxIhV8Jt2SmpVzlvVDwqdOabPBQzLpUOTvi157E3qQmRCmzL95xzRJboU_J06pfMvQYiLMnNnLpdc4x20sk1MscO09XmVh5PnbU/s400/Pipevine+swallowtail+laying+eggs-3.jpg)
Hooray!
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