Mizell's Butterfly and Hummingbird Extravaganza in Folsom, LA
Ranked #1,146 in Local, #118,813 overall
Folsom Festival is Fabulous Family Fun
Each September, Mizell Farms welcomes butterfly and hummingbird lovers to their nursery for the annual Butterfly and Hummingbird Festival. Events include speakers, hummingbird banding, visiting the butterfly house, touring the nature trail, plant related activities for the children, a butterfly release, food and several booths operated by local vendors. The festival is a great "one tank" family trip for anyone who lives in the Gulf South.
The village of Folsom is a quiet town, located near the Tchefuncte River in Northwestern St. Tammany Parish. It is the home of Mizell Farms, where the festival is held, as well as many other nurseries and the Folsom Native Plant Society.
NEW FESTIVAL DATE
Mark Your Calendars for
Saturday, Sept. 12, 2009
Extravaganza Events
The 2008 festival was a great success. Hummingbird bander, Linda Beall along with many able assistants, banded 76 Ruby-throated Hummingbirds, with males and females being equal at 38 each. The age/sex breakdown was typical for this time of year: 3 adult male, 14 adult female, 35 immature male, and 24 immature female. Even though a drenching thunderstorm, shut the festival down at 2:30 p.m., a good time was had by all.
Before the thunderstorm hundreds of butterflies of many different varieties floated among the colorful blossoms in the lavish gardens.
Next Year's Festival will be held on the Saturday after Labor Day.
Sept. 12, 2009
6:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m.
Festival Events include:
$6.00 admission (12 and older)
Bring the family--something for everyone
Stroll through the Gardens, Butterfly Flight House, and Nature Trails
Listen and speak with the experts
Purchase plants to attract butterflies and hummingbirds
Food and drinks will be available for purchase
Free parking
Watch hummingbirds being weighed and banded
Weather in Folsom, LA
Current weather conditions in Folsom, LA (70437)
Local Pollen Reports
52°F (Feels like 52°F)
Last update: 11/29/09 7:41 AM CST
Humidity: 94%Visibility: 10.0 mi
Dew Point: 50°F
UV Index: 0 (Lawn and Garden Weather)
Barometer: 30.08in rising
Moon: Rush Hour Traffic
Wind: calm From: Airport Conditions

Today
Fair
High: 74°F
Low: 57°F
Sunrise: 6:39 AM
Sunset: 4:59 PM

Monday
Nov 30
Partly Cloudy
High: 67°F
Low: 49°F
Sunrise: 6:40 AM
Sunset: 4:59 PM

Tuesday
Dec 1
Showers
High: 59°F
Low: 54°F
Sunrise: 6:40 AM
Sunset: 4:59 PM

Wednesday
Dec 2
Showers
High: 62°F
Low: 42°F
Sunrise: 6:41 AM
Sunset: 4:59 PM
Hummingbird Gardens
Louisiana Plant Nursery Ideal for Butterfly/Hummingbird Festival
Excerpt from a Newspaper Article by Gary Noel Ross
photo by E. Goodman
Gary Noel Ross in Mizell's Butterfly House
As NABA's Director of Butterfly Festivals since 1998, I have had the privilege of assisting almost a dozen different butterfly festivals in the eastern U.S. Each has been unique. Case in point: MIZELL FARMS BUTTERFLY AND HUMMINGBIRD FESTIVAL. The setting for this event is a wholesale/retail nursery specializing in herbs and the propagation of nectar and host plants preferred by butterflies and hummingbirds whose home is the sultry Gulf Coast.
Mizell Farms, Inc. is a 56-acre, three-generation home site located in rural St. Tammany Parish (County) in southeast Louisiana. For decades, this family owned and operated nursery specialized in evergreen perennials such as azaleas, camellias, boxwoods, hollies, etc. and trees However, as butterfly and hummingbird gardening were becoming increasingly popular in the late 1990s, Jim Mizell, the current owner and manager, realized that there were very few wholesale nurseries growing appropriate herbaceous annuals and perennials for the retail trade. Seeing the opportunity, Jim decided to specialize.
Jim targeted both retail nurseries and popular farmers' markets in nearby New Orleans and Baton Rouge. So successful, the idea of holding a weekend celebration on the grounds of his nursery was soon born. For a trial run, in late September 2001 Jim debuted a "Hummingbird Extravaganza," and the following weekend, a "Butterfly Extravaganza." With attendance each weekend over 2,000, Jim concluded that there was sufficient interest to consider annual events.That he did, but in 2007 the independent festivals were consolidated into a single day (September 8) advertised as a "Butterfly and Hummingbird Extravaganza." Activities began before sunrise when Linda Beall, a federally authorized master hummingbird bander professionally trained to humanely catch and band hummingbirds for statistical analysis, arrived to set up feeding and trapping stations throughout the gardens. However, most visitors didn't arrive until nine o'clock for the first scheduled event-the dedication of the new "Mizell Farms Butterfly Flight House." I was asked to formerly dedicate the 35 x 48-foot netted enclosure stocked with nectar and host plants as well as approximately 200 live butterflies (the insects had been collected on the grounds the previous day). The flight house proved to be a favorite gathering site for visitors of all ages. As such, I used the venue to speak at length about butterfly biology and identification. Within this living "laboratory," visitors could have a close encounter with butterflies courting, mating, laying eggs, basking, and even securing salts from our perspiration. In addition, caterpillars of the Black Swallowtail, Monarch, Gulf Fritillary and Cloudless Sulphur could be scrutinized as they fed on their hosts. (At the close of the festival, a section of netting was removed, freeing the butterflies.)
photo by E. Goodman
Outside, visitors could wander through what Mizell Farms advertises as "the largest butterfly and hummingbird gardens in Louisiana." Propagation houses, herb greenhouses, and yards featuring an assortment of species in various sized containers showcased the nursery's offerings. Adjacent to these commercial areas, the Mizells had installed demonstration landscape plots. Here visitors could view both the growth form of mature butterfly/hummingbird plants as well as how each species might be incorporated into a formal home landscape ranging from simple potted patio accents to sizable installations incorporating swimming pool, water garden, and even guest house. For those visitors wishing to experience a more natural habitat such as a pine/oak woodland characteristic of the region, Jim had constructed "nature trails" to crisscross much of his undeveloped acreage. As a bonus, some of these trails opened into small fields ablaze with multicolored zinnias (seeds had been sown earlier in the summer). Family members, friends, local high school students, and volunteers from Master Gardens and local garden clubs were scattered throughout the nursery to assist visitors. As with most educational festivals, representatives from various nature oriented associations and vendors of nature-based arts and crafts were present, too. And when hunger called, a local chef was kept busy cooking and serving jambalaya-a favorite south Louisiana dish.
The festival was not without indoor programming. For this, the Mizells' guest house was modified into a makeshift auditorium. Throughout the day local specialists addressed such topics as Hummingbird Gardening, Butterfly Gardening, Native Plants, Honey Island Swamp Bird Banding Station, and Digiscoping (digital close-up photography).

Ruby-throated Hummingbird After Chase by naturegirl7
In 2002 I began conducting an official NABA "Fourth of July Butterfly Count" during the festival. The number of individual butterflies has ranged between 198 and 754, and the number of species, between 23 and 26. (In 2007, 634 individuals and 24 species were counted, bringing the cumulative number of species to 37.) Always common are: Giant Swallowtail, Spicebush Swallowtail, Eastern Tiger Swallowtail, Cloudless Sulphur, Gulf Fritillary, Common Buckeye, Monarch, Fiery Skipper, and Ocola Skipper. Other species that frequently show up include: Palamedes Swallowtail, Little Yellow, Sleepy Orange, Pearl Crescent, Variegated Fritillary, Red-spotted Purple, Carolina Satyr, Silver-spotted Skipper, Long-tailed Skipper, and Sachem. However, in 2002-only two days after Tropical Storm Isidore made landfall in south-central Louisiana-two unexpected species showed up: Large Orange Sulphur (1 female) and Great Southern White (2 males, 1 female). Now, whereas the GSW is a resident on Grand Isle (approximately 110 miles directly south of Folsom) and, therefore, could easily have been displaced northward by Isidore's winds, the LOS is not a Louisiana resident. The most likely explanation for its presence in Folsom is that the single individual was blown several hundreds of miles from either southern Florida or southern Texas. (The female GSW was particularly attracted to the nectar of marigolds; in addition, she deposited about a dozen eggs on nursery stock of cleome and nasturtium, recognized hosts.) Not surprisingly, the festival in 2002 was extra exciting!
And those hummingbirds? In 2007, a total of 54 individuals were banded; all were Ruby-throats.
banding photos by E. Goodman
Mizell Farms Annual Butterfly and Hummingbird Festival is scheduled for September 2008. The nursery, however, is open throughout the year. Visit www.mizellfarms.com for details.

Monarch Butterfly on Asters (Wildflowers) by naturegirl7
Gary Noel Ross, Ph.D. is a retired Professor of Biology (Southern University) living in Baton Rouge, LA. For contact: GNR-butterfly-evangelist@juno.com.
Butterfly and Hummingbird Gardening
Designs by Naturegirl7 on Zazzle
Fun at the Festival
Festival Necessities on CafePress
Latest news about Hummingbird Festivals
- Hummingbirds and Their Habits | Latest and free articles source
- A number of events have been prepared for the celebration of hummingbirds. These include the Hummingbird Festival and the Hummingbird Migration Celebration. The festival itself includes a car show, rides for children, food vendors, ...
- Hummingbird Festival 8/22 « Charlotte On The Cheap
- Hummingbird Festival 8/22. If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my website by email. Thanks for visiting! August 22nd, 10AM to 4PM: Celebrate hummingbirds and learn about them. Games, music, face-painting, ...
- Hummingbird Festival - Hummingbird Festival < Birds < Wolfstad Blog
- Last Saturday we visited the Hummingbird Festival at Camp Sagawau. We learned about hummingbirds, watched how they capture them for banding and we saw a bander at work. Amy posted about the event on her birding blog: I was a migrating ...
Butterfly & Hummingbird Extravaganza in pictures
Gardening Lenses You May Enjoy
-
Butterflies and Gardening to Attract Them
-
What is more beautiful than a garden full of colorful flowers with gorgeous butterflies flitting around? It's really not that hard to create a haven like this right in your own yard. All you need to create this sanctuary for you and the butterflies a...
-
Clearwing Hummingbird Moth
-
One may think there's a tiny little baby hummingbird flying among the flowers, but more than likely it's a Hummingbird Clearwing Moth. This moth will feed during the day and it's shape, coloration and scaleless wings give it the appearance of a small...
-
New Orleans Goes Buggy for Bugs
-
If you live in one of the Gulf Coast states and want to take a "single tank" vacation, then you should head for New Orleans to see the brand new Audubon Institute Insectarium, a museum which displays and celebrates our largest family of animals, the...
-
Gardening with Native Plants
-
Using native plants in the landscape and sustainable gardening are 2 hot topics, today. This lens will provide you with native plant lists, techniques, and links to more information that will get you started on the way to creating an ecologically hea...
-
Hummingbirds and Gardening for Them
-
Who wouldn't want to attract hummingbirds, nature's flying jewels, to their yard? Hummingbird feeders will help bring them into view, but to really sustain them it is necessary to plant for them. Planting a Hummingbird Garden full of nectar rich flow...
Directions to Mizell's
Cross the Lake Ponchatrain Causeway. Stay on Highway 190 until it connects to Highway 25. Mizell Farms is located one mile North of Folsom on the left side of the highway.
View Google Map for 83211 Highway 25, Folsom, LA
Tell us about your favorite festival.
-
Reply
- foreverme foreverme Jul 31, 2009 @ 9:33 am
- Love this lens! But I think I'll wait for cooler weather to visit Folsom.
-
Reply
- OhMe OhMe Jul 30, 2009 @ 7:55 am
- Back again to this beautiful lens to invite you to add it to my new Festivals lens plexo. Thank you.
-
Reply
- KimGiancaterino KimGiancaterino Feb 25, 2009 @ 12:48 pm
- Wow... this is the most beautiful SquidZipper lens I've ever seen!
-
Reply
- ElizabethJeanAllen ElizabethJeanAllen Oct 26, 2008 @ 4:31 am
- Beautiful gardens and pictures. The festival looks like a lot of fun.
Great lens
Lizzy.
-
Reply
- tdove tdove Sep 1, 2008 @ 10:27 am
- Thanks for joining G Rated Lense Factory!
- Load More
Here's my favorite link:
Links to More Hummingbirds
Add your favorite Hummingbird links or vote on the ones that are already on the list.
Hummingbird Pendant
1 point
Hummingbird Pendant
1 point
Favorite Butterfly Links to Vote for
Which Butterfly link do you like best? Vote on one of these or add your own.
THE BUTTERFLIES OF LOUISIANA Photo Gallery by Ronnie Gaubert at pbase.com
Beautiful Photos in naturalistic settings.0 points
The Butterfly Website
Everything you ever wanted to know about Butterfli more...0 points
How to Make a Butterfly Garden
Dr. Gary Noel Ross, a renowned expert gives pointe more...0 points
Passion for Passion Vines - Folsom Native Plant Society
A page all about passion vines and Gulf Fritillary more...0 points
Butterfly Gardening in LA
0 points
NSiS: Florida Butterfly Gardening with Native Plants
Creating a butterfly habitat and butterfly gardeni more...0 points
Butterflies of LA Booklet pdf
0 points
Smithsonian Butterfly Garden
0 points
What's That Bug?
0 points
Welcome! | Butterflies and Moths of North America
The home page of Butterflies and Moths of North Am more...0 points
by naturegirl7

We are Master Gardeners and... (more)




















Fetching new data from eBay now... please stand by











