In love

My daughter and I went back to The Butterfly Estates in Downtown Fort Myers this morning and again became lost in the beauty surrounding us.

The Florida Native Butterfly Society, which is a nonprofit organization, helps in protecting and preserving these beautiful inspects. Every now and again they will share that they have an abundance of butterfly eggs to share for a small donation. Yesterday that announcement came for the Julia butterfly and today we were there picking up our eggs to raise at home. We asked for 10, as my friend wants to raise some too, and they provided many more to make sure we did end up with 10 Julia butterflies.

The host plant is that of the passion-vine family, which we have a plentiful supply. The hope is we can bring some to the garden after raising some in our butterfly house. The eggs are yellow and the caterpillars are brown with white spots and black spines. I am excited to watch the life cycle.

According to Florida Wildflower Foundation it is known as the Julia heliconian and Flambeau, the flame and belong to the brush-footed family. Their wingspan can range up to 9.2 cm.

Just like the zebra longwing, they too visit a food source repeatedly along a set route. They are year round visitors in Southern Florida.

As we strolled through the butterfly house this morning there were tons of Julia butterflies mating, sipping on nectar, resting and flying about. It was a beautiful sea of orange every where you looked. The female is duller in color with more black markings, while the male is brighter orange with narrow black borders.

The underside

The gulf fritillary is among my all time favorite butterflies because of the coloring and pattern is so different than the top of the wings.

We had two beauties emerge yesterday in our butterfly house, and one that just emerged today, taking our total to 30 successfully raised gulf fritillary butterflies.

The first photo I was so excited to capture, as she is portraying the complete underside of her wings.

This butterfly has been the champion in the garden since Hurricane Ian. I have witnessed a plethora of them enjoying both nectar and host plants. Lately I have been rounding up countless caterpillars to put into the butterfly house with its host plant. Right now we have 14 more chrysalis waiting to emerge and quite a few caterpillars still munching away.

This butterfly can be found in all 67 Florida counties. I have read that in the late summer, and even through the fall, a large number of adults will begin migrating south to peninsular Florida, as they overwinter in frost free areas.

This beauty was the second visitor to our garden once my daughter and I started creating a butterfly garden.

And then there was more

A female monarch butterfly depositing more eggs on our milkweed. This butterfly can lay up to 300 eggs a day and can produce up to four generations during just one summer, according to Save Our Monarchs.

Did you know that a monarch can fly at speeds between 12 to 25 miles an hour and their wings flap about 300 to 720 times a minute?

Another fella

What do you enjoy most about the monarch butterfly? What about them catches your eye when you see them fluttering by?

A new favorite of mine, which is an extraordinary perk, the monarch butterfly sitting for a few seconds, minutes before taking their first flight after emerging in the butterfly house.

This is a male (two dots on lower wing) that emerged yesterday in the butterfly house. I love how the light is shining through the wings.

Fascinating

This gulf fritillary decided to make its J right at the opening of the butterfly house, which was perfect for me to witness, and photograph (only 133 photos) the chrysalis being created.

It’s truly fascinating to watch, as every caterpillar goes about this final transformation different. The making of the chrysalis always leaves me in awe. As I was watching it unfold through the lens of the camera, I saw the muscle contractions intensify as it was shedding its skin. I am always shocked how violently they “dance” at the end remaining attached to the silken thread that has them attached to the surface they choose.

I had six more in the J form after this one completed its chrysalis. This one joined a half a dozen other chrysalis in the butterfly house. The house is going to be a sea of orange soon.