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Fireflies Love This Native Flower – And Its Golden Blooms Light Up Summer Gardens

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There are few sights more magical than fireflies on a warm summer evening. Even now, they still feel slightly unreal to me; all of those tiny floating lanterns drifting through the dusk as though a handful of fairies have escaped into the garden? It makes me feel like I've tumbled into a wonderland of my very own, Alice-style.

As a gardener, I've spent years trying to make my outdoor space more welcoming to wildlife, from bees and butterflies to birds and bats. But if I'm honest, fireflies have always held a special place in my imagination. There's something wonderfully nostalgic about their soft golden glow, turning even the very dullest backyard into something that feels enchanted.

Of course, attracting fireflies isn't just about leaving the porch light off (although that certainly helps). No, these fascinating insects need food, shelter, moisture, and safe places to complete their life cycle. In other words, they need habitat. Is it any wonder, then, that fireflies love this native flower so much?

Fireflies Love This Native Flower

Whether they are your birth month bug or not, firefly larvae are beneficial predators, which means there are plenty of reasons to want these pretty little insects in your garden.

The easiest way to lure them in? Well, according to Firefly Conservation & Research, one native flower in particular can help create the kind of conditions that fireflies love.

Asters and goldenrod

(Image credit: DebraLee Wiseberg / Getty Images)

Yes, I am absolutely talking about goldenrod. One of North America's most valuable native wildflowers, goldenrod (aka solidago) is a powerhouse plant for wildlife.

Despite its reputation for causing hay fever – a misconception that's actually caused by ragweed blooming at the same time , the bright yellow flowers provide nectar and pollen for a huge range of beneficial insects, helping to support the wider ecosystem that fireflies depend on. More importantly, goldenrod thrives in the naturalistic, slightly untidy habitats where fireflies feel most at home.

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No wonder, then, that Firefly Conservation & Research lists goldenrod among the native plants that can help support firefly habitat, alongside asters, cardinal flower, and boneset. Rather than attracting fireflies directly in the way a flower might attract a bee, goldenrod helps create the healthy, biodiverse environment these insects need to survive.

The Best Flowers for Fireflies:

Fireworks Goldenrod

Nature Hills Nursery

Fireworks Goldenrod

With a mounding, clump-forming habit, Fireworks Goldenrod reliably provides end-of-season color and majesty aplenty.

Everwilde Farms - 500 Tall Boneset Native Wildflower Seeds - Gold Vault Seed Packet

Everwilde Farms

Everwilde Farms - 500 Tall Boneset Native Wildflower Seeds - Gold Vault Seed Packet

Boneset has long been heralded as a must-plant flower for those hoping to support fireflies in their yards.

Queen Victoria Cardinal Flower

Nature Hills Nursery

Queen Victoria Cardinal Flower

Few plants deliver such a powerful combination of ornamental beauty and ecological impact as this pollinator favorite.

Beyond its wildlife credentials, goldenrod is simply a beautiful garden plant (and the birth month native plant for those of us born in November). Its tall stems and golden flower plumes bring movement and color to borders from late summer into fall, when many other flowers are beginning to fade.

Better still? Well, the blooms seem to catch the evening light, glowing softly as the sun drops lower in the sky, and they do so without demanding endless work from you. In fact, it's remarkably easy to grow, with most goldenrod varieties hardy across a wide range of USDA zones, able to tolerate drought once established, and returning year after year with very little fuss.

For gardeners hoping to support fireflies, remember this: there's no single plant that can guarantee a backyard full of flashing lights. By choosing native flowers like goldenrod and creating a more wildlife-friendly garden overall, though, you can give these magical insects a much better chance of sticking around.

And if you're lucky, you might find yourself watching their golden glow dance above your own golden flowers on a warm summer evening. Win win, right?

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