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SueAnn Past Time Bears
Double Oak, Texas
Posts: 21,917

SueAnn Help Advisor, Banner Sponsor

Back in the late 70s and into the 80s, I did a LOT of butterfly photography and even had (what I called) my own little Backyard Butterfly Farm.  I planted stuff that attracted butterflies that laid their eggs there.  Then I harvested the caterpillars, put them in glass containers, fed them their host plant, and watched as they morphed into a chrysalis. Then when they emerged as a gorgeous butterfly, I shot their photos before they went off and had their wings maimed by whatever.  Haven't done any of that since we moved to Double Oak in 1985, but I had the great fortune a couple of weeks ago to find two monarch butterfly caterpillars on a milkweed plant growing in our yard.  HA . . . back to my old ways.  I put them in a container and waited like an expectant mom.  Today was the day for one of them to be "born".  Unfortunately, I didn't photograph all the stages, but here are some of the pics.  I wasn't quick enough to get a good photo with the wings spread open, but got a fair one.  Here is a link to a great monarch website that has superb photos of all the stages.  http://www.monarchbutterflyusa.com/Cycle.htm If you're interested, of course.

This is the empty chrysalis and one that has a few more days to go.
Monarch_Pupae.jpg

This is soon after emerging from the pupa, with wings not fully dried.
Monarch1.jpg

The butterfly is still not able to fly.
Monarch_2.jpg

A little more of the wings are showing . . . you can see a deep orange.
Monarch_3.jpg

It's a little stronger now and spreading the wings.
Monarch_4.jpg

It took a short flight to another plant and rested for another hour or so.
Monarch_5.jpg

Now ready to fly - and away it went.
Monarch_ready_to_fly.jpg

This whole cycle lasted approximately 3-4 hours from the moment it emerged from the pupa to when it flew away.
I find it all very fascinating.  bear_wub  bear_wub  bear_wub  bear_wub

Mo Beary Mo Bear Designs
Redcliff, Alberta, Canada
Posts: 1,536
Website

Amazing pics.  Isn't nature wonderful.

Jane

Marlys Waggle Bears
So Cal Desert
Posts: 4,089

Great pictures, Sue Ann.

I love the Monarch Butterflies. When Allyn and I were first married, we lived in Pacific Grove in Northern California...it's contiguous to Monterey. Every October the Monarchs migrate from Alaska to Pacific Grove and it is a beautiful sight. They are all over the trees and plants and are just amazing. Lover's Point in PG is their main hangout when they arrive and there are millions of them. It's a huge tourist time as well as people come from all around the world to see the butterflies.

http://www.pgmuseum.org/Monarchs.htm

This site gives you a little about the migration.

It's interesting that these Monarchs migrating to Northern California live longer than a normal Monarch. Every generation of the Monarch only lives about 6 weeks, but the migration generation lives up to 9 or 10 months and fly over 2,000 miles. I suppose that they cannot live in the far Northern climates and this migration generation takes on this huge task of traveling so far so the species can survive...that's just my guess, I don't know that for a fact.

But I agree, Sue Ann, they are a beautiful sight and very interesting.

:hug:  :hug:

makafelts Charlotte Des Roches Designs
Adkins, Texas
Posts: 1,543

Thanks SueAnn for sharing such a special part of nature...I love butterflies of all kinds!!!

Hugs &

thumperantiques Newcastle, Ontario
Posts: 5,645

Sue Ann, your post brings back a lot of memories!  When our kids were small, we always hatched monarch butterflies in the summer.  My kids grew used to watching them hatch, but I kept it up because my dad never grew tired of watching them.  He loved to visit when we were waiting for them to hatch.  It really made me smile to see him - he was like a little kid.  We are now thinking it's about time to do it for our grandson.  Thanks for the memories.

                                         hugs,

                                         Brenda

TamiL Dolls N Dreams
Aurora, Colorado
Posts: 6,454

Amazing photos, thanks so much for sharing!

valewoodbears Valewood Bears
Yorkshire
Posts: 6,537
Website

Wow that is amazing, must have been great to see this emerging

Pauline

matilda Matilda Huggington-beare
WA
Posts: 5,551

OH Sueann I so do luv butterflies. Thankyou for that it really has me fascinated.  :hug:
OK I did my homework. Your Monarch is a boy. hehehehheheh But of course you knew that. But I didnt. hahahah

Delartful Bears Delartful Bears
Australia
Posts: 3,518

ohhhh how beautiful.  What a fascinating cycle they go through - and what an interesting thing you do.
bear_wub  bear_wub  bear_wub  bear_wub   Beautiful photography - thankyou so much for sharing.
Danni

SueAnn Past Time Bears
Double Oak, Texas
Posts: 21,917

SueAnn Help Advisor, Banner Sponsor

Thanks for checking out the photos and for your nice comments.  Good eye, Wendy . . . "it" is definitely a boy monarch!  I hope to find some caterpillars in the fall to hatch.  Those are the ones that migrate to CA and Mexico.  They pass through Texas going to Mexico and sometimes we see many of them at one time.  Just gorgeous!

bearlyart Canna Bear Paint
NY
Posts: 749

Oh, truly beautiful Sue Ann!  I never knew anyone that harvested caterpillars before, but the results seem well worth it  bear_wub  bear_wub

We just bought a few hummingbird and butterfly plants today for the back garden, so this seems a very timely thread for me to look at!  We won't mention the dog leaping through the air, trying to eat a passing Tiger Swallowtail.  Ahem.  Nope, definitely won't mention that one.

Bear hugs,
Kelly

Jodi Moisan Storytime Bears
Posts: 1,122

I never knew it happened so fast, they are amazing!!!!
:hug:
Jodi

Carolyn Green Draffin Bears
Auckland New Zealand
Posts: 5,354
Website

Thanks for sharing your photos SueAnn.
We used to have swan plants and watch the miracle of the Monarch butterfly hatching out - I find it so fascinating.


Hugs
Carolyn
bear_flower

rkr4cds Creative Design Studio (RKR4CDS)
suburban Chicago
Posts: 2,044

Bingo! There are 4 milkweed plants that got overlooked in the gardens' general primpings and clean-ups so far this spring. I've followed this discusiion with interest and was torn about turfing them out. I just came into the studio/computer room to see a monarch landing on them right outside the window. Looks like I'll be hatching babies too!

Just looked back to check if she was still there (however do they spy that particular greenery in acres full of everything else??) and realized how lucky I was to see her. What with all of the 17 yr cicadas flapping about wildly, it's like a noisy throbbing blizzard out there. Their 17 yr adolescence doesn't include flying lessons...

rkr4cds Creative Design Studio (RKR4CDS)
suburban Chicago
Posts: 2,044

Thought I'd give you a view out one side of the studio window. It's quite breezy todat so it was hard to make this Feathered Buckthorn bush stay in focus. It doesn't know it yet but it's about to turn 'Toes Up'!

From the number of cicadas drilling holes along the branches, it'll surely die late this fall or over winter. The silly buggers aren't supposed to be attacking shrubs, just trees.

I have a thread-leaf red Japanese maple that's about 3' high after 26 years. I tried wrapping it in netting 3 times and they still found their way in through the folded over & over stapled seams. I guess I'll get to do some shopping next spring!

cc1.jpg

cc2.jpg

Jellybelly Bears Jellybelly Bears
Australia
Posts: 4,066

Wow!! amazing photos and you too Sue Ann!  I never knew you did this.  It must have been so beautiful and fascinating  bear_original

rkr4cds Creative Design Studio (RKR4CDS)
suburban Chicago
Posts: 2,044

Our 4 yo grandie was holding a coupled pair up by one wing, "Look Grandma, they're 'dancing' !"

In the second pic, on the left, all of those out-of-focus brown spots in the grass are more cicadas - the ones that blundered into the trees and fell to the ground rather than grabbing a leaf or a branch.
I enjoy the spectacle because one gets only 4 or at the most 5 of these in a life time, but I feel like wearing netting myself as I race between house & garage. They really should take flying lessons....

Lisa q.D.paToOtieS
Near Fredericksburg, VA
Posts: 1,349

I have to tell you that your photo story is just gorgeous!  I think butterflies are just amazing.  I made my hubby build me a couple of Butterfly houses from plans we got from our local Extension Service.  Anyway, thanks for sharing!

Nina Maryland
Posts: 37

WOW!!! What amazing pics! Nature is certainly wonderful!

bear_original

WildThyme Wild Thyme Originals
Hudson, Ohio
Posts: 3,115

How glorious Sue Ann!!!!!!  Thanks ever so much for sharing!  bear_wub  :hug:

Kim Basta

SueAnn Past Time Bears
Double Oak, Texas
Posts: 21,917

SueAnn Help Advisor, Banner Sponsor

Monarch-2-for-TTjpg.jpgWell, poo and rats . . . the second monarch emerged sometime before I got up this am, so I only had enough time to put it out on the honeysuckle and take a couple of pics before she was ready to move on.  Check it out, Wendy . . . it's a girl!  Thanks, everybody, for looking and I appreciate your responses.  Ooooooh, Bobbie, don't all those cicadas make a terrible racket?  All that buzzing - eeek!

rkr4cds Creative Design Studio (RKR4CDS)
suburban Chicago
Posts: 2,044

Rats Sue Ann, your second image isn't showing up...  OK, now it is

The 'racket' is very interesting. It's several sounds actually. The first one to start in the morning about 6:30 is a high humming that one associates with flying saucers, then the click click ratcheting sound if you have one by the wings and shake it, which sounds like a rattlersnake's shake to me, and then the pulsating loud & louder sound that most cicadas make, but many many times louder than the annual August ones. It's almost a town-by-town, block-by-block thing, with some having very few and us being in a heavy zone.

I figured it out - this would be my Dad's 6th episode, at 93, and if he still lived here in the upper Midwest. 1922, 1939, 1956, 1973, 1990 and now 2007 It's only my 4th. With all the digging we've done in our gardens, I'm suprised that we had this many emerge.

What gives it even more of an alien look is the number trees that are swathed in aluminum foil about 3' up from the ground. The thought is that that would stop them from climbing up the trees to shed the exoskeleton.
I guess those ppl forgot that they fly after their wings harden, like the monarchs.  It's a natural pruning for older trees, and it's the young trees that're in danger of loosing too much of their tip growth when the Mommies spike the tender tips in 6" strips to lay their eggs. Which fall to the ground in about 6 weeks as nymphs, to burrow underground and stay for another 17 years.

Tammy Beckoning Bears
Nova Scotia
Posts: 3,739
Website

Sue Ann those pictures are just so beautiful.  I just love butterflies, there is something magical about them.   I could watch them for hours.  My children both had cocoons in their kindergarden classes and got to watch them  change.   I enjoyed going in to their classroom everyday to see the changes and then see them release the butterflies into the woods.

MerBear MerBear Originals
Brockville, Ontario
Posts: 1,540

I was woken up our first morning in the country in Thailand by the wierdest noise that gradually rose to a crescendo and then tapered off. Then again at dusk, same noise. I found out it was the cicadas - never saw them but the noise was incredible - so surreal.

Marion

Michelle Helen Chaska, Minnesota
Posts: 2,897

oh how glorious!!! Love the pictures...

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