![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgfMLa-C5kJOQ5yUl6uMfiIjXzsqj0Ii28wSrzeJCp917ajp42B6LAtQQ8-KlkNTQeEMPgYjPqMH0yvMi21l4y9jtNY5UdjDMjzu4oU1NAD54wj7q5ASl1JwLunR2U8QcuvSw1IjLRKK_E/s400/pipevine-and-zinnias(web).jpg)
I've never been particularly fond of zinnias, but maybe I just didn't know them very well. The large garden zinnias, planted in the Peter Rabbit Garden by a colleague, are butterfly magnets. The zinnias reseeded happily from last year, and right now it's a wonderful butterfly pitstop.
Maybe because of our drought, nectar sources are literally drying up, so only minimally watered garden flowers are a respite.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh6pUkmm5gYz4yl9oQvZWmq4GO4kvbNhB-KLJSCHBu25UjISjV-XQNZMJ8Ok9A8UegOfsSK_JKy8CpqLDsnc74nxizX0B6jR_SW18_m6aEgk1tV6G8YLvzzkKGU5VEH1Da5CuK9WXfhUSQ/s400/checking-out-a-zinnia.jpg)
But the butterflies were abundant - mostly tiger, black, and pipevine swallowtails, with an odd silver-spotted skipper, gulf fritillary, and a single monarch dropping by.
Pipevine swallowtail![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhxPnOiOndyzP7aCml72RqNLDrucdyJQwmxzAAXlZWMwr4xa8IkH2wCUX8WG4bwRUHtb3smtgPotXjA3e-CuFjGRWV94Dm2xl4minvwkGKuh4NZjPsPRk1NIzNk4NSICLts0b6P6kqWe2Y/s400/pipevine-swallowtail.jpg)
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