Argyranthemum ‘Butterfly’
‘Butterfly’—a lush carpet of color to brighten up the August landscape
August blahs set in when all the spring color disappears from the garden but summer plants are not yet in bloom. To remedy this we recommend a tried-and-true cultivar that delivers an easy carpet of butter yellow daisy flowers—the short plant with the long name, Argyranthemum ‘Butterfly’.
While some call it the Marguerite Daisy, we simply call this plant reliable. It grows about 18 inches tall and wide, and the foliage is covered with a dense carpet of blooms that have mini Nilla Wafer cookie eyes. ‘Butterfly’ stays in bloom from now until frost. In landscape beds we set it in front of vertical plants like Cleome ‘Clio Magenta’, but it’s also effective as a straight groundcover or as a specimen in a beautiful piece of crockery.
Yellow daisy flowers have eyes that resemble mini Nilla Wafer cookies
We’ve noticed that the breeders have improved the cultivar considerably over the past decade. It has a lot more flower power than it did back then, so if you haven't worked with ‘Butterfly’ recently you should give it a try. It has turned into a tough, drought-resistant plant that can handle the water deprivation of the summer months. Some of our Field Day attendees talked about ‘Butterfly’ sailing through the summer with heavy color coverage even though the irrigation lines were broken for a couple of months.
Argyranthemum ‘Butterfly’ is shipping now in the 4.5 and 6-inch pot sizes.