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Cataloguing all interesting things from my garden and life

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  • Writer: subhashini
    subhashini
  • Nov 24, 2020

To watch caterpillars grow, molt, pupate and butterflies emerge and take flight, is a rewarding experience your garden can easily provide you.

A close-up of a green Common Mormon caterpillar clinging to a stem, with white markings and an eye-like pattern on its head, blending perfectly with its surroundings.
A Lime butterfly on a Lemon plant.

My first encounter with an army of caterpillars was many years back when I had just ventured into gardening. A dozen caterpillars were happily munching away the leaves of the Curry Leaf plant to their hearts content. It was a young plant, and I was worried that it would get destroyed. In an impulse, I snipped the branches and threw them away. A few weeks later, I saw a bright green caterpillar on the Crepe Jasmine plant. It too was devouring leaf after leaf, and its droppings covered the ground. It froze the moment I touched the branch, its haunting blue eyes stared back at me and vanished into the wrinkle of its head. The guilt of throwing away the caterpillars from the Curry Leaf was already tormenting me. I decided to leave them alone and learn more about it.

A vibrant green Oleander Hawk Moth caterpillar clinging to a leafy stem, showcasing its striking blue eye-like spots and smooth, segmented body, blending seamlessly with the greenery around it.
A Very Hungry Oleander Hawk Moth Caterpillar
A brown Oleander Hawk Moth caterpillar hanging from a stem, with its skin starting to transition from green to brown, surrounded by fresh green leaves and buds, against a softly blurred natural background.
A few days later the skin of the caterpillar starts changing to brown.

Internet informed me that the caterpillar was called an Oleander Hawk Moth and it prefers the Oleander or the Crepe Jasmine to lay its egg. The caterpillars feed on the leaves, and when it was time to pupate, the skin turns into a combination of black and orangish brown. It then reaches the ground and starts to pupate among the dry leaves. I kept observing the caterpillar for the next few days until it changed colour. I was at peace that I didn’t break the branch away.

A brown Oleander Hawk Moth caterpillar in its final stage, clinging to a stem surrounded by green leaves, with a white flower blooming softly in the background, highlighting the transition before pupation.
In the final stages of being a caterpillar.

A stunning Oleander Hawk Moth resting on the ground, freshly emerged from its pupa, showcasing its vibrant green and pinkish-purple patterned wings against the earthy background.
A stunning Oleander Hawk Moth resting on the ground, freshly emerged from its pupa.

The next time I saw a green caterpillar on the Curry Leaf plant, I left it alone. I knew from experience that the leaves would spring back to life in a matter of days.

Most butterflies are attracted to colorful flowers. However surprisingly some prefer overripe and rotting fruits, bird droppings, animal dung, or even dead animals. But for a caterpillar to grow and satiate its voracious hunger, butterflies lay their eggs on specific plants called food plants or host plants.

A Baron butterfly perched on a partially eaten guava fruit, absorbing nutrients, with the fruit surrounded by vibrant green leaves and signs of bird activity.
A baron butterfly absorbing nutrients from a Guava fruit half eaten by birds.

In order to attract butterflies I also needed grow food plants. I started with Ixora, Pentas, Lantana, Hamelia Patens, Marigold, Cosmos, Periwinkles, Porcelain flower etc. These are sunlight requiring plants. The butterflies not only feed on the nectar they also bask on them to receive sunlight.


The crowning moment of growing a garden happened when I watched three butterflies emerge out of their pupa on consecutive days: the male and female of the Common Mormon Swallowtail and a Common Rose. Watch a lime butterfly emerge from its chrysalis.


A Lime plant in the backyard regularly hosts the Common Mormon caterpillars. But the Common Rose required the plant of genus Aristolochia for its larvae to feed. A retired professor, whom I had met serendipitously during one of my walks, gave me the seed pods of the Aristolochia Grandiflora vine to me.

A striking Aristolochia Grandiflora flower with its intricate maroon and white patterns, a dark central throat, and a pale yellow core, surrounded by lush green leaves in a sunlit garden.
Aristolachia Grandiflora

Aristolochia Grandiflora is a perennial vine that spreads across compound walls and fences. The duck or pelican shaped flower stink, and so do its seeds. Growing a vine is a bit tricky. As you already know, not all seeds turn into plants, and after a series of trial and error, a sapling showed up. Four months later the vine outgrew the small trellis, and quick enough a couple of Common Rose Caterpillars appeared on the vine. I was thrilled. At first, there were about eight of them. Over the days the numbers dwindled, and only one of them reached the pupal stage. I love how a caterpillar looks like a zombie the day before it starts building the pupa.

A spiky Common Rose butterfly caterpillar clinging to a black metal rod, its dark maroon body adorned with red spines and a white saddle-like marking, set against a blurred background.
A spiky Common Rose butterfly caterpillar clinging to the black metal trellis.

The next morning I found a pink pupa, suspended by a silk girdle. As the days drew near for the butterfly to emerge, the pupa started turning transparent. Nineteen days later, on a sunny morning, the colourful Common Rose flew out.

Side-by-side comparison of two butterflies: on the left, a Common Mormon butterfly with black wings adorned with pink and orange markings, perched near its chrysalis; on the right, a vibrant Common Rose butterfly with striking black, red, and white markings, resting on a black metal rod.
Comparison of two butterflies.

It is a rewarding experience, to watch caterpillars grow, molt, pupate, before the butterflies emerge and take flight. In the last few years, apart from growing food plants like Lime, Curry leaf, and Crepe Jasmine, I’ve also grown Passiflora, Kalanchoe, Ginger Lilies, and Custard plant which are the host butterflies such as Tawny Coaster, Red Pierrot, Grass Demon, and Tailed Jay. Bamboos attract skippers and browns. The Common Baron hosts on the mango tree while it feeds on the ripe fruits of Guava. We have now seen nearly eighty varieties of butterflies flutter through the garden.


A garden is not just a collection of plants. It is an ecosystem which also attracts birds, bees, wasps, insects, and moths. The choice of the plants depends on the choice of colours you see and the sounds you want to hear.


Until Next time

Cheers from Hydrangeas This article first appeared in Deccan Herald on 22 November 2020. Pictures added here are mine.

 
 
 
  • Writer: subhashini
    subhashini
  • Oct 31, 2020
Urban gardening can be tricky if you do not understand your plants and their needs

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“I bought this colorful plant with so many buds. It was lively for a few days and then it stopped blooming.”

“It was the brightest spot in the room. I watered it every day. Now it has all turned yellow”

“I am a serial plant killer. Every plant I’ve cared for has died”

“Do they deliberately sell plants that will survive for just two weeks?”


I am often asked these questions by exasperated souls. Urban gardening can be tricky when you are beginning to garden without a good knowledge of plants and their needs. Once you understand, gardening becomes an interesting and addictive activity.


Though soil, water, wind, temperature, nutrients are all important for the growth of a plant, the one paramount requirement is sunlight. Different plants require a different amount of sunlight. If you’ve been to rose gardens, you will notice them in open areas with no trees in the immediate periphery. Rose plants require ample sunlight, about six to eight hours in a day. So if you buy a rose plant and place it in a partial shade, it will have poor growth and will yield fewer flowers. On the other hand, African violets are indoor flowering plants which require indirect sunlight. If you place them in the bright sun, they will wilt in a day.


You must be knowing that the sun doesn’t rise exactly in the East and West. It happens only on two days in a year, on the Spring and Fall equinox. The intensity of sunlight and the shadows it casts keep changing throughout the year. Gardening in crowded cities is a tad bit difficult because of this. Also because of closely-knit buildings and apartments you mostly get partial shade.


So as part of your garden planning, you must note down how much sunlight your balcony/apartment/house/terrace receives during the day and in a year. If you plan to start a garden in the terrace and it gets six to eight hours of uninterrupted sunlight you are good to go. If it is your back or front yard, again, note the amount of sunshine including nooks and corners. If you plan the garden in your balcony which doesn’t have ample sunlight, you have succulents and houseplants to choose from.

Now that you have an idea about the sunlight, let’s head to a nursery. Whichever nursery you visit, observe how plants are arranged there. My favourite place in Bangalore is the Lalbagh garden and nursery. Once you enter the nursery, the left side is a long stretch with roses and other plants under direct sunlight.

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On the right, beneath the shade of huge trees are plants that require much lesser sunlight. As you walk around, the description boards give you the name of plants and the light required: shade, semi-shade etc. Not all nurseries have display boards but most of them have these arrangements sorted out.

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Once you know how much sunshine and shade your garden gets, you can select the plants accordingly. You should also know that if you have a mix of sun and shade requiring plants, You have to keep moving them between sunny and shaded areas as the season changes.

The saplings in the nurseries are grown in small containers or in plastic bags. They are just a few weeks to months old and their roots are young which makes them easily transferrable without damage. If it is in a bag cut open the bag with a scissors. If it is a pot, hold it in your hand and invert it. Holding the plant firmly between your fingers, gently tap it to free it from the container. If you are not confident of potting the samplings on your own, many nurseries offer potting services too.

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If you do not want to start from saplings but from seeds you are in for a lot of joy. Nothing can match the jubilation of watching the tender green seedling pop its head from that small crack on the surface of the earth and take shape.


Next time we will look at plants that can make up your garden.


Happy Gardening and cheers from the Campsis Radicans, they’ve begun to bloom you know. This article first appeared in Deccan Herald 25th October 2020.



 
 
 
  • Writer: subhashini
    subhashini
  • Sep 27, 2020

When the lockdown happened in March this year, our world shrunk to within our

four walls. We were confined to our homes juggling between mounting

chores and work. Our living room morphed into an office, a classroom, and a play

area. While the internet was our virtual window to

stay connected with work and family, the freshly dusted home windows

opened to a vibrant scene. Copper pods, Gulmohar, Amaltas, Pongamia,

and other flowers were setting the sky ablaze with a riot of

colours. Cities that were noisy with vehicles were now teeming with the

songs of birds. A pollution-free air uncovered the mountains. The sky

sparkled a fresh blue. It was like nature had used a sharpening tool

to brighten the world. People identified Sunbirds, Bulbuls, Mynahs,

Sparrows, and Barbets in their neighbourhood. Even the ubiquitous crow

got noticed. Regardless of the lockdown and people at home, the

pigeons continued to lay eggs in flower pots. A small amount of

leisure that was lacking in normal life got created.

As a poet once said, people had finally found the time to stand and stare.


The most important skill any lover of nature should possess is observation.

Observation informs us and many a time surprises us.

There are a pair of rain trees in my neighbourhood which are a storehouse of fascinating stories.

They sport pink powder-puff flowers in summer and are also

called the five o'clock tree, for they close their leaves at

sunset. In the winter months of December and January, they shed their

leaves. When the Spring season begins, fresh foliage starts to

sprout. Flowers and seedpods seem to appear simultaneously. Parakeets

flock to eat the ripened pods, competing with the squirrels that are devouring them.

If the flowers had just bloomed, where then did the

seedpods appear from? I pondered. I was baffled. The resolution of

this mystery was more interesting than I had thought. The

flowers that bloomed the previous year, became seedpods eight months

later! So I was looking at fresh flowers, but the seedpods were from the

flowers of the previous year. What a marvel of nature!


Another quality of the rain tree is its sensitivity to close its

leaves when it rains. This allows rain to flow effortlessly down the

crown and reach the ground. The day after, the leaves open up preventing

sunlight from reaching the ground. This in turn slows down the

moisture from evaporating, making the area beneath the canopy

cool. For this reason, it is a preferred tree in parks, avenues and

school grounds.


Nature around us is forever trying to heal with its greenery. All that

we need to learn is slow down a bit and immerse in its serenity. A

walk in the park under the cover of trees relieves the pressures and

tension of daily life. In the 1980s, the Japanese started a practice

called Shinrin-Yoku, which meant “Forest-Bathing.” It is not

difficult to bathe our homes with some greenery. All it takes is a few

plants to convert a dull corner into a colourful one. It can be herbs

that you might want for the kitchen, a few succulents on the window

sill, house plants to add jazz to the living room or vines that will

sport colourful flowers in the balcony. The right type of plants and

flowers will invite bees and birds for a visit. The songs of nature

will surround you. This is the simplest way to practice Shinrin-Yoku.


Gardening is a peaceful activity that helps us relax. Once we get

accustomed to it and start spending time with our green friends, the

quality of our life will improve. “Motley Garden” is a series that

encourages you to grow a garden. People shy away from it thinking it is too difficult, a chore, and an onerous responsibility. It is not.

Instead, you will find it a joyous experience that heals the body and

soul.


In the coming months, we will talk more about plants and flowers. But

the first skill to learn is to observe. Do you have Rain trees too?

If not, what are the trees in your neighborhood?


Until next time,

Cheers from Flowers.

This article first appeared in DeccanHerald, under Motley Garden, https://www.deccanherald.com/special-features/pause-to-wonder-893166.html


 
 
 
© 2025 by Subhashini Chandramani. All Rights Reserved
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