No. 130

Four more monarch butterflies hatched successfully today taking our total count to 130 that we have released.

My husband built our first butterfly house on June 13, 2021. It has since been downsized and moved on our porch, as something was breaking through the screen to take the chrysalis when located outdoors. Our first monarch butterfly hatch was on June 23, just 10 days later. Our caterpillar raising has not been consistent since last June, until the past few months, as we have had a healthy supply of new caterpillars continually entering our butterfly house and finishing its life cycle. When you start to raise caterpillars, you see first hand that not all make it to a butterfly.

For more information about monarch butterflies, as well as photos from our garden, click https://sweetbutterflybliss.com/monarch-butterfly/?frame-nonce=efe6bbc090

Nature at its finest

As I was heading out for my morning exercise, I of course had to take a detour through my front butterfly garden. I spotted this monarch beauty depositing eggs on our giant milkweed.

The best, though, was closing my front door to see a new chrysalis right below our window. It’s amazing how much activity takes place over night.

There was more excitement in our butterfly house. A gulf fritillary hatched this morning, our fourth one we have raised from caterpillar.

More success

This morning as I was cleaning out our butterfly house and replacing some of the plants for the caterpillars within, I heard a small cracking noise and looked up to see a monarch butterfly slowly emerging from its chrysalis. It is such a spectacular sight to watch, especially knowing how the life of the butterfly began.

It emerges by splitting the now translucent chrysalis along the length of the proboscis near its head. The monarch then slowly moves its legs out, holding on while removing the rest of its body. The body is swollen with fluid when it first emerges. The monarch will begin pumping fluid from its body to the veins of its extremely soft wings. According to “Florida’s Fabulous Butterflies” the wings expand by the pressure of the fluids moving through the veins on its wings. Once completed, the body shrinks to a normal size. The monarch then hangs upside down, we have seen for more than two hours at times, drying, hardening, its wings before it’s ready to take its first flight.

Today we had six successful hatches in our butterfly house, all of which emerged before 10 a.m. Once they began flying around the butterfly house we released them into our butterfly garden. Some flew to the branches of trees, while others flew to areas where they could sit longer.

For more information about monarch butterflies: visit my page: https://sweetbutterflybliss.com/monarch-butterfly/?frame-nonce=337ab32fc1

New beginning

As the chrysalis opens at the bottom, slowly the head and feet make its way out before the monarch’s beautiful wings emerge followed by the rest of its body. Although I have seen many hatch in our butterfly house, the magic of that transformation, the new beginning . . . will never loose its excitement.

For more information about monarch butterflies: visit my page: https://sweetbutterflybliss.com/monarch-butterfly/?frame-nonce=337ab32fc1

Incredible transformation

When you slow down enough, you get to witness incredible transformations revealing themselves right before your eyes. The journey from an egg to a butterfly is truly incredible to witness.

For more information about monarch butterflies: visit my page: https://sweetbutterflybliss.com/monarch-butterfly/?frame-nonce=337ab32fc1