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sports
June 28, 2023
Three Tips to bring on the Butterflies

Butterflies, with their iridescent wings, graceful flights, and collection of colors and patterns, are some of Oklahoma’s most popular insects. Besides serving as important pollinators of native and cultivated plants, these winged visitors are a joy to watch and are relatively easy to attract with nectar-producing plants. These three tips from our “Landscaping for Wildlife” guide are sure to bring on the butterflies.

BUTTERFLY BIOLOGY Butterflies undergo four distinct life-cycle stages: egg, larva (caterpillar), pupa (chrysalis) and adult. Soon after the adult lays her eggs, the larval caterpillars will hatch and begin voraciously eating specific plants. Once the caterpillars have grown large enough, they will enter the pupa stage, when the caterpillar’s worm-like appearance gives way to a seemingly magical transformation. A wrinklewinged adult emerges from the chrysalis shell. After stretching and drying its wings, it will probably begin feeding on nectar, sap, or detritus.

TIP NO. 1: PLANT A BUTTERFLY PATCH Because butterflies are drawn to larval host plants and nectar-producing flowers, attracting butterflies can be as simple as planting a butterfly garden. A single native plant bed with larval host plants and nectarproducing flowers can be a central attraction for both butterflies and butterfly watchers. Your garden can be as simple as a few nectar plants in pots or as complex as a home landscape designed with sequentially flowering nectar plants. Before you begin a butterfly garden, decide from the start how much time, expense, and effort you want to invest in your habitat project. Creating a successful habitat requires more than one season of planting, so you should keep that in mind from the beginning.

Even if you invest the maximum and have the best butterfly garden in the world, you can only expect to attract butterflies that naturally occur in your area. Learn more about the species found in Oklahoma by checking out this countylevel checklist, flipping through a field guide, or browsing the Xerces Society’s website. In addition to taking an inventory of which butterflies you can expect to attract, take stock of the plants in your yard, including the ”weeds” that may hold special value for pollinators. Field guides or apps like iNaturalist or Seek by iNaturalist can help you in making the correct identifications.

TIP NO. 2: PLANT FOR COLOR Being a good butterfly host often means keeping flowing plants and water available. Nectar-feeding butterflies are attracted to red, orange, pink, and purple flowers arranged in clusters in sunny areas of your yard. Adult butterflies typically prefer blossoms with large petals that provide a platform where they can feed securely on nectar. Butterfly gardens can combine annual and perennial cultivated flowers with wildflowers at staggered blooming intervals to provide a continuous nectar supply.

Providing larval food plants for caterpillars as well as nectar blossoms for adults will increase your chances of attracting more butterflies. (Another advantage of providing larval food plants is that you can observe the caterpillars as they munch.) We share a list of common butterflies and their host plants below.

TIP NO. 3: SOAK IN THE SUN Because butterflies prefer open, sunny spaces, a full-sun native wildflower garden is ideal.

Butterflies are ectotherms and must raise their body temperature by basking in the sun, often while perched on flat, light-colored stones. Incorporating basking areas among your sunny blooms should make your butterfly garden even more appealing.

A full-sun garden may be ideal for drawing in adult butterflies, but even the sunniest blooms will be a challenge for nectaring butterflies if the wind carries them away. A wind-sheltered garden with a fence or a windbreak of trees and large shrubs can make a sunny garden more welcoming to the winged visitors. Caterpillars may also need food plants in shaded areas.

Hayden and Dan Jeffries win Crappie Masters National Championship
sports
Hayden and Dan Jeffries win Crappie Masters National Championship
September 27, 2023
The National Championship on Lake Eufaula in Eufaula, Oklahoma has come to an end! After three days of competition, $125,000.00 was awarded in cash and prizes! Taking home the third-place trophy and $...
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The Eufaula Lady Ironheads win Regional Championship
sports
The Eufaula Lady Ironheads win Regional Championship
By Rodney Haltom sports EDITOR 
September 27, 2023
The Eufaula Lady Ironheads (21-9) outlasted Chandler in a dramatic finish 2-1 Thursday at Chris Gawf Field in Eufaula. Eufaula and Chandler battled throughout the championship game with great pitching...
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Checotah tops IVI u Id row 7-6 in Homecoming game
sports
Checotah tops IVI u Id row 7-6 in Homecoming game
By Rodney Haltom sports EDITOR 
September 27, 2023
It was a defensive battle all night as the Checotah Wildcats (4-1, 1-0 District 3A-3) survived to get a 7-6 win over the Muldrow Bulldogs. The team had a big week as they kicked off Homecoming with th...
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Obituaries
Winzley Joe Vanna Ray White
September 27, 2023
Winzley Joe Vanna Ray White was born Sept. 11, 2023 in McAlester, Oklahoma to Jamon Ray White and Wittany Nicole Kess.She peacefully passed Sept. 11, 2023 to Sept. 15, 2023away in her sleep on Sept. 1...
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Obituaries
Gerald E. “Jerry” Todd
September 27, 2023
Gerald E. “Jerry” Todd, of Eufaula, was born Feb. 21, 1934, in Chilton County, Alabama, the son of Herman and Zadie Todd. He passed at the age of 89 on Aug. 27, 2023 in Eufaula. Jerry was one of four ...
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Nancy Marie Mouser
Obituaries
Nancy Marie Mouser
September 27, 2023
Nancy Marie Mouser, 66, of Eufaula, Oklahoma, passed away Thursday, Sept. 21, 2023, at St. Francis Hospital of Tulsa. Nancy was born on Nov. 3, 1956, in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma, the daughter of Richard...
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Court Report
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McIntosh County District Court ReportMisdemeanor CasesChase Alexander Brooks-McGuffin: possession of CDS; unlawful possession of drug paraphernalia Dallan Ray Davis: threaten to perform an act of viol...
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Kids under 18 got a chance to participate in the Crappie Master’s tournament
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Fun-Facts of Sooners verses Longhorns
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Sooners firepower too much for Bearcats
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No. 16 Oklahoma defeated the Cincinnati Bearcats 20-6 Saturday in the first Big 12 Conference game for Cincinnati. OU quarterback Dillon Gabriel completed 26 of 38 passes for 322-yards and two touchdo...
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