How to attract Monarch butterflies to your garden
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monarch butterflies
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The Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) is surely one of the most beautiful and fascinating insects in the world with its large reddish-orange wings veined in strong black lines, its soaring graceful flight and its amazing migratory habits.
The Monarch is known to fly incredibly long distances and is one of the only butterflies that can cross the Atlantic. This butterfly migrates southwards each year from Canada and the northernmost States and millions overwinter in California and Mexico before starting a return journey in the spring.
Sadly over the last few years the numbers of this magnificent insect have been dropping rapidly due to the combination of climate changes, destruction of their habitat and food plants, as well as the widespread use of pesticides and herbicides. Illegal cutting down of the forests the butterflies overwinter in is another serious threat to their survival According to CNN there are at least one million less Monarch butterflies that have been overwintering than last year.
Fortunately for the Monarch butterfly more and more people are doing what they can to help this wonder of nature to survive and the best way is to plant milkweed (Asclepias species) that the striped caterpillars need to eat.
Many organisations have been set up with this in mind and searching online using the words "monarch butterfly" + "milkweed seeds" you will soon find websites that, at a very reasonable price, will sell you seeds of the many species of milkweeds that exist, and there are a few companies that even distribute the seeds free for a SASE. Most of the milkweeds have pretty flowers and look great in your garden as well as being the only plant the Monarch butterfly caterpillar can eat.
There are species of milkweed such as the Showy Milkweed (A. speciosa) that can grow in the cooler more northerly States, as well as ones that like a warmer temperature like the very popular Tropical or Scarlet Milkweed (A.currassavica). If you don't have a garden a balcony or roof terrace will work just as well because milkweed will grow well in large flowerpots or even in windowboxes.
Most of the species of milkweed are easy to grow and should produce seed pods too, as long as they don't get totally eaten by butterfly caterpillars. The Monarch larvae eat a lot of leaves so the more plants you grow the better chance you will have of being able to rear more caterpillars through to the chrysalis stage, from which in a matter of weeks the adult will emerge.
Monarch chrysalises are a wonder too behold in themselves being fashioned in a pale jade green with a row of bright metallic golden spots and they hang down like little bottles of magic butterfly potion. As the Monarch inside gets ready to complete its metamorphosis the colours of its wings can be easily seen through the increasingly transparent wing casing area.
Finally the day arrives and the butterfly breaks its way out, expands and dries its wings for an hour or so before leaving on its maiden flight. To see your first Monarch go through this amazing transformation is a day you will never forget.
Monarch butterflies live in many other countries besides Canada and America, including Australia and New Zealand, and in Europe they are found as breeding populations in the Canary Islands and Madeira. The Monarch butterfly has sometimes been found as a rare migrant to the UK and has even got as far north as Russia and Sweden. Perhaps it is not surprising that it is also known as the Wanderer butterfly?
Site you can buy many types of milkweed from: http://www.butterflyencounters.com/index.html
and free seeds here: http://www.livemonarch.com/free-milkweed-seeds.htm
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Comments
great and ejoyable information. I'm planting some milkweed next week...just because of what you wrote. I love butterflies and have read that Monarchs have been known to return to the exact tree of their parents...(how they track that I don't know) but when I was teaching, I did a segment on Monarchs and we "hatched" some out in a little box. What a wonderful experience.... I loved their color and vibrancy. I didn't remember about the milkweed part so I'm glad you had that in your piece.
we should do what we can to help balance nature, to make up for the damage we humas do out of ignorance or whatever.
good read. Marisue
This is a very interesting hub and I have to admit I learned something about monarch butterflies by reading it. The pictures are great!
Thank you for your comments, Patty, Marisue and SweetiePie!
Marisue, very sadly for many a Monarch not only individual trees but whole forests have been destroyed in Mexico! Good luck with your Milkweed growing. I planted some in pots on my balcony and a female butterfly found it and I have had butterflies here ever since. The females are desperately seeking plants to lay their eggs on and because people are killing Milkweed and not growing it as a garden flower they are having more and more trouble finding any. They have hundreds of eggs to lay and nowhere for them to go! Thanks for helping them!
Thank you for this wonderful information! Spring has just arrived here in Michigan and guess what I'm going to be planting in my garden this year? :-)
I am really pleased to hear it, Marianne! :)
Somewhere I have a pattern for a "down" jacket to be stuffed with milkweed fibers after they "pop" open. It was published by Mother Earth News quite a while back. People could grow milkweed, attract Monarchs, and use the fibers for jackets, preserving fowl feathers for the fowl.
Thanks Bard, I have a few Monarchs, but I am going to get some milkweed seeds are either plants, I have plenty of horse manure so that will hopefully fertilize them, is milkweed a running vine or just a short plant?
Patty, that is a brilliant idea and indeed, the seeds are attached to downy fibres that allow them to get blown in the wind to new locations. To get seeds ready for planting this material is usually thrown away but your idea provides a great potential use for it!
Gerry, there are many species and most grow to couple of feet high although there are some types that can reach 5-6 foot.
Here's a site that provides many types and shows you the wide range of variation.
Great hub with excellent info & photos.
I see you're new here - so welcome!
Thank you very much, Paraglider! Yes, I arrived just the other night and thought I had better make a start so did with something important to me!
What an great article. I love Monarchs and for several years I hadn't seen any at all. That all changed about four years ago when I planted my first Purple Coneflower (Echinecea). The first year it bloomed I saw two, I found that encouraging so I have divided and replanted the Coneflower so now we have 3 clumps and last summer we saw at least a couple of dozen Monarchs. They seem to love "sipping" from the Coneflowers. But obviously I need give them someplace to lay their eggs too. I know what my first plant purchase will be when the greenhouses open up here in the frozen north (Ontario, Canada), a milkweed plant. I'll go adopt one from the woods if I must. Thanks for the great and informative article!
Your hubs are great. Wonderful job with the photos.
Thank you for your feedback, Meanderfly, and yes, whilst the adults need food their caterpillars do as well and for the female Monarchs this has now become a real job to find any. I read somewhere that in a natural state they are only supposed to lay one or two eggs per plant so there is enough for the larvae to eat, however, with a severe shortage of food plants and hundreds of eggs to lay they end up plastering their eggs all over any they find with disastrous consequences - one or two on a plant may have enough food but 20 will not. I have had to watch this problem here and take steps to get more leaves for the caterpillars. The biggest threat to Monarchs on this island is lack of milkweed!
Thank you too, Violette! :)
Dear Bard, I wish I could send you some milkweed. I remeber playing in the woods as a child and seeing the pretty flowers of the milkweed and my mother saying I should not pick them because of the sticky white milk - she didn't want me to get sticky. Haha. Kids are attracted to sticky. My point? Yes I do have a point... I live in an urban area now, but there is a gully near here that runs for a good distance and is a naturally ocurring wildlife perserve. I suspect that there is milkweed growing there or I would not be seeing Monarchs at all. Still I will try to plant some in my yard, as I do have many naturalized local plants growing here already. It will fit in nicely - But I wanted to do more, so I wrote an article on my blog that points back to your article. http://meanderfly.blogspot.com/2008/04/save-monarc and I also added a new section called "Best Reads on the Web". Your article is the first honored member!
Meanderfly, thanks so much for this great response and article! :)
Bard of Ely, I re-read this again to make sure I am doing my part. I just love these little butterflies and am concerned about the bees disappearing as well. It's so sad to hurt the process of nature and it's dangerous as well.... Everyone can plant a little milkweed....such a small thing. thanks again --
I have just built a blog site http://www.butterflyattracting.com and will put a link to your article on hub, there, soon. Feel free to go there and blog about butterflies too. ( and thank you for letting me put that link here..) I am just learning more about them, so I dedicated a blog site just to them! =)
Excellent - thank you, Marisue!
Aww, I love Monarchs. I only realized after reading this how rare it's been to see one (or ANY butterfly, for that matter) recently. I wish I had a space for a garden...I'd definitely plant some milkweed.
Alas, I live in a city apartment...
Thanks for posting, Elaine! They are getting rarer here too - we had a lot of very hot weather followed by gales and there have been far less around ever since, coupled with drought the plants they need aren't growing so well and the main problem is that nowhere near enough people grow milkweed anyway!
We see a few Monarchs here, and I have found what I call "the jewel cases." They have hatched in an insect cage, and are a wonder to behold. My neighbor and I grow what is called here in North Carolina, Butterfly Weed. I know it is a type of milkweed and looks like what you are calling Tropical. Do you know if it's the same thing? Thanks for all the info on your blog.
Yes, it's the same plant also known as Scarlet Milkweed, Curacao Milkweed, Mexican Milkweed, Swallow-wort and Bloodflower. Basically any milkweed will do!
The caterpillars get taken by wasps so if you have any and you have cages they are safer in these. I have been rearing them in large empty plastic water bottles cut in the middle for access and taped back together. I put caterpillars and milkweed in and clean them out as necessary and supply fresh food. That way they are safe from natural predators like wasps. The caterpillars pupate on the sides and at the top of the containers.
http://www.simplyonlinebusiness.com/livebutterflyg
Butterflies also help us understand the interaction of plants with other organisms.Butterfly watching also offers us an escape. Watching butterflies is an opportunity to slow down, breathe deeply and enjoy the beauty of Mother Nature at her best. This is a pretty awesome thing watching caterpillars become chrysalis and then hatch into butterflies.I really enjoyed reading about live butterfly garden on your page.This is interesting stuff to consider buying for the kids.Well done.


















Patty Inglish, MS says:
2 years ago
Thanks for this Hub! I saw only 2 Monarchs last summer, compared to hundreds a couple of decades ago. Haven't seen a grasshopper in 10 years. However, August 2000 was hot enough to produce hundreds of praying mantises on every block of the city. People stood in parking lots at night and just watched them.