Monarch butterflies set to spring into flight

#Middlebury #Monarch

Itching to travel for spring break this year? It’s not just you. Consider the Monarch butterfly: It’s common for these beauties to spring into flight through different migration corridors of the country and head north this time of year.

To get inspired by the life cycles and travel itineraries of Monarchs, kids in Minnesota’s Twin Cities landed at a family event on stark and frozen Lake Harriet to learn and interact at the Monarch Butterfly Migration Shanty (think ice-fishing house). Wearing decorated helmets, they rode “Monarch-winged” bicycles on the ice. Thick canvas wings painted to represent butterflies were attached to bicycle handles and available to all.

Brendan Frost, 11, “flies” through winter on a Monarch butterfly bicycle over a frozen lake. (Submitted photo)

“I’m flying like a Monarch,” exclaimed 11-year-old Brendan Frost, as he imagined his flight from Mexico to Canada.

Inside the shanty, heated by a wood-burning stove and decorated to represent where monarchs overwinter, kids in wool hats and scarves colored paper butterflies, “tagged” them and clipped them to fir-tree sculptures as they learned about pollinators and the migration of these wondrous creatures.

Here are three ideas to begin your own monarch adventure:

Attract Monarchs to Your Yard

As you plan your summer garden, add milkweed to attract Monarchs. Poke a sign in the ground saying, “This is a butterfly-friendly yard” to encourage your neighbors to do the same.

Raise Monarch Butterflies

Observe firsthand the wonder of how a caterpillar emerges from a chrysalis as a brilliant orange, black and white butterfly. Insectlore.com is a resource many teachers use for ordering caterpillars and supplies. Or check out books from your library or online about how to find caterpillars and eggs in your own garden habitat this spring.

Send a Butterfly Greeting

Take a photo of that Monarch that landed in your garden and print it. Or find images of Monarchs and draw your own. Attach the photo or cutout drawing to the front side of a folded sheet of card stock or heavy construction paper. Inside, write a message to a special friend or relative.

Maybe it will be a story dictated by your child about the transformation of a caterpillar to a butterfly in school or in your home, or this lovely poem, attributed to Nathaniel Hawthorne:

“Happiness is a butterfly which, when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp, but, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you.”

Donna Erickson’s award-winning series “Donna’s Day” airs on public television nationwide. To find more of her creative family recipes and activities, visit www.donnasday.com and link to the NEW Donna’s Day Facebook fan page. Her latest book is “Donna Erickson’s Fabulous Funstuff for Families.”

© 2019 Donna Erickson
Distributed by King Features Synd.

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