Our first monarch experience was in the Fall of 2005. We had read in "Our State" magazine about the migration over a particular overlook on the Blue Ridge Parkway near Brevard, N.C. and planned a weekend trip around it. There were plenty of waterfalls and hiking trails near our cabin in Dupont State Forest which we enjoyed. When we finally reached the Cherry Cove overlook we found a couple of ladies there who were as eager to share information about the monarchs with us as we were to learn. Turned out that just as we arrived, the monarchs began to fly over - perhaps a hundred in the two hours we were there. The ladies let our granddaughter tag and release one butterfly. We were hooked.
The trip in 2006 was not as fruitful. We went back to the same place about the same weekend, but the ladies weren't there and neither were the monarchs. It was still a fun trip and we enjoyed some of the North Carolina apples and returned to the waterfalls, this time stopping by sliding rock.
This year we tried a new cabin on the other end of the parkway hours from Brevard. We had tracked down one of the ladies by her name tag off a picture we had taken the first year and wrote her. She had replied in an email and we began corresponding on-line. We had planted a swamp milkweed plant very late in the season from a local nursery in Charlotte not expecting to find any caterpillers on it but the week before our trip, we counted a dozen of them on it. On our trip we checked out a place called the Orchard at Altapass where another lady gave us a wonderful demonstration of the monarchs with a few terrariums full of chrysalides and caterpillars in various stages. On Saturday we drove the long trek down the parkway to Cherry Cove and the lady from Brevard was right there waiting for us. There were only a few monarchs that day, but we enjoyed visiting our new friend and mentor. She gave us some milkweed seed pods for planting our own next Spring.
As we left the cabin, we took our granddaughter for one more trip to Brevard since it was a warm sunny day. But as we drove past Grandfather mountain (still 2 hrs from the Cherry Cove overlook) we passed two ladies with butterfly nets. So we stopped to check them out at an overlook called Pilot Ridge. What a great decision that was. It was a long overlook with lots of goldenrod along the edge. These ladies from Tennessee were quite helpful too and even knew our mentor from Brevard. They helped our granddaughter catch with her tiny net, tag and release three monarchs. We stayed there for over an hour and saw a couple hundred fly by us. Later we learned the ladies had counted over a thousand monarchs in the four hours they were there.
We came home fulfilled and eager to see how the caterpillers at home were doing. We ran to the milkweed and found almost all the leaves gone but six caterpillers still there munching on the last few. We took them inside and put them in an old aquarium turned on its side with screen wire over the opening. Then we watched in the next two weeks as all six made their chrysalides and emerge at monarchs. Our friend from Brevard had shared a sheet of tags which we used to tag and release them. Our granddaughter made a powerpoint presentation to her 4th grade class and even took the last monarch to school to show her classmates how to tag and release him.
We have a couple younger granddaughters coming into age to enjoy the monarchs and hope to include them next year. What a delight it has been to meet new friends and learn about these wonderful creatures God put here for us to enjoy. And now we are passing information on to others who want to experience the joy the monarchs have brought us. Thanks to the ladies from Brevard, Tennessee and the Orchard at Altapass for being so helpful and informative. We now have a family tradition that I hope will last my lifetime and beyond.
EdH from Charlotte, NC