by mich » Thu Aug 27, 2009 12:05 pm
My family AND friends still think I'm a little bit off... but they're coming around. Slowly. My family - all of whom live in WI - will be helping me out with the last of the cats. I need to go there for the weekend - and the cats have to eat - so they're going with me. My sister, bless her heart, spent the last 5 days running around scrounging milkweek. She found a treasure trove of it at the Flower Factory just outside Madison. They do not use pesticides and had a number of cats on their sale plants. Yay - they'll eat well. And have an additional 120 miles to cover...
The local PBS station had a little feature on the local newscast that covered a man in Chicago who was raising monarchs. He gave a shoutout to MonarchWatch when he demonstrated tagging the butterflies. After watching the newscast, one of my friends allowed as how I may not be quite as eccentric as she had thought if there were other people doing this. TV coverage is a good thing.
As an update to my previous post, the first of my butterflys flew on 8/19; since then I have released 46 with another 3-4 going today. It has been very cool and the butterflies are sleeping in. One warm day and 25-30 are going to go at once! I had the trifecta of death over the weekend and was glad I'd read in one of the posts about the freezing euthanasia method. I killed a cat that had just shed his skin; I jarred him loose from the side, he fell, black gook leaked from both ends and he started turning black. I froze him. And I won't ever do THAT again. One of my butterflies eclosed overnight, apparently fell to the floor of the aquarium and was unable to right herself. Her poor wings were so deformed that she would never be able to fly and one side couldn't be moved at all. She was trying so hard. I cried all day after I had to freeze her. It did teach me, however, exactly why the aquarium is not such a great idea. Works well for cats, but the slick surface can be death to the butterflies. I won't ever let THAT happen again. The "birthing aquarium" is now lined with hardware mesh. One of my cats decided to pupate by attaching himself to the side of the aquarium. I stood there and told him he was being foolish, but couldn't do anything about it at the moment; he was one of several pupating at once. I planned to move him as soon as I could open the aquarium up, but within an hour of flatspotting his chrysalis, it leaked a couple drops of clear fluid. I have not removed the chrysalis, but I assume that is a bad sign. The chrysalis looks normal, just flattened on one side at the top; I cannot stand the thought of putting another butterfly to sleep - should I destroy the chrysalis?