Raising Book Resources
Raising Hope for the 2022 Monarch Migration- Raise The Migration Results

Raise The Migration is an annual North American challenge to raise monarch butterflies to release for fall’s annual monarch migration. The time has come to share your 2022 experience and raise it forward…

The raising season is coming to an end, so we’d love to hear how many butterflies you released for fall’s annual 2022 monarch migration…and more importantly, what lessons you’ve learned through this amazing raising experience?
If you’ve still got some raising to do, raise on! But please post in the comment box at the bottom of this page after you’ve released your last butterfly.
Every year, I start Raise The Migration in July, but monarchs raised at that time aren’t actually migration generation butterflies…they’re the parents to that amazing generation of travelers.
There’s no way to tell whether butterflies will mate or migrate, but one telltale sign of a migration generation butterfly is its size, which is dependent on how much the caterpillar eats. The first super-sized caterpillars start to form chrysalides around the first week of September in our northern region…
In the garden, you can tell non-migratory butterflies by their worn out wings. Non-migratory males are also more aggressive, chasing off potential competition while seeking out female companionship…migratory monarchs are in sexual diapause and only interested in stocking up on nectar for the long journey ahead.
So how did our Raise The Migration Monarchs fare this season and what lessons did we learn raising forward?
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If you’re interested in a step-by-step guide digital guide with free updates (before each monarch season begins in spring) please check out the monarch raising guide by clicking this butterfly photo:

For anyone who purchases the guide (or any other item) from Monarch Butterfly Life, you will be invited to our closed facebook group where you can discuss raising monarchs with other raisers and post your photos.
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Here are Raise the Migration results from the past eight seasons:
2021- 86% Survival Rate
2020- 82% survival rate
2019- 81% survival rate
2018- 93% survival rate
2017- 100% survival rate
2016- 96% survial rate
2015- 96% survival rate
2014- 90% survival rate
2013- 100% survival rate
As you can see from the results, this raising system is consistently producing healthy monarchs to help support the struggling monarch population.
Raise The Migration 2022 Results
Caterpillar Escapes
By keeping monarch eggs and baby caterpillars in sealed food containers, and raising larger caterpillars in the mesh cages, we never lose caterpillars.
I think the closest we have come was two years ago when I forgot to close a cage door and found a caterpillar crawling on top of the cage. 🐛 😱
Unexplained Caterpillar Deaths
None in 2022
Caterpillar Diseases and Parasites?
None in 2022
Accidental Deaths?
None in 2022
Chrysalis Problems
None in 2022
Butterfly Eclosure Issues
None in 2022
Final Results
As you may know, we moved to a new location and we're starting to plant our perennial butterfly garden this fall 2022, so we raised very few monarchs this summer. However, we did have some wayward common milkweed plants, so we raised just a couple, but we raised them well. 😊
Our totals are from all eggs that have successfully hatched. We don't count eggs that were parasitized outside or monarchs brought in as caterpillars because they could have parasites too.
2 monarch butterflies emerged from their chrysalides between August 28th and August 31:
0 accidental death (butterfly fall)
0 disease or parasite issues
0 unexplained deaths
0 healthy males
2 healthy females
100% survival rate
Lessons Learned?

I think the biggest lesson I learned this year had nothing to do with raising monarchs. 2022 was a year of extreme change for my family and raising butterflies was put on hold so we could focus on more important things, but that's life! I'm hoping to have more time for gardening and raising monarchs again next year.
My biggest raising lesson this season was that placing cages under the protection of trees works well in rain storms...the chrysalides went though a couple heavy rainstorms and didn't even start to come loose inside the cage. Still, I prefer raising in a porch that's 100% free of extreme weather. We are planning to raise monarchs in a new gazebo next season...
Migration Memory 2022
This is our first year with a new garden, and we have yet to make it our own. However, there have been a few highlights to the season:
- an abundance of phlox in shades of pink/white attracted many giant and tiger swallowtails, and hummingbird moths
- One night at dusk we went out and saw about a dozen large white-lined sphinx moths nectaring on the phlox...it was magical, and one night only
- Large flowered zinnias were the monarch favorites with a limited menu
- 6 Mexican Sunflowers (tithonia rotundifolia) purchased from a nursery, seem to have hybridized with (tithonia diversifolia) which was a POOR substitute for attracting monarchs and the first flower is yet to bloom ⌛️🦋🇲🇽
I hope you enjoyed reading about my Raise The Migration '22 results and lessons learned raising monarchs through the butterfly life cycle .
And now, I'd love to hear about your experience...
Share Your Results?! ✍️
Please share your results below by letting us know how many monarchs you released to help boost the struggling monarch population…remember to include your location.
More importantly, please share the most valuable lesson(s) you learned about raising monarch butterflies, that you believe can help others raising forward.
Thank you for helping to Raise the Migration in 2022
204 comments
I planted common milkweed seeds in my garden last year. Then I planted hyssop and cone flowers for some nectar sources in the spring. In July I saw one Monarch flying around my milkweed which was barely a foot high. Later I spotted an egg. I couldn’t believe it. The milkweed was still so small. I brought it into the house, then searched online to learn how to care for it. Later my husband found 2 more eggs. I knew I had to get serious. I bought one of your tabletop netted butterfly enclosures on Amazon. Before I knew it I had 3 caterpillars. It was amazing because I didn’t think I’d be raising Monarchs this year. My garden was still so new. But by the end of the 1st and 2nd week of August, 3 beautiful Monarchs emerged. My husband shot a video of me releasing them. This experience was so worth it. Now I look forward to adding more plants to my garden while raising Monarchs yearly. I want to do everything I can to help the species survive. We can’t lose them! 🦋
I live in central Illinois and this was a very disappointing year. There just were very few monarchs visiting my garden this summer. Illinois had at least 2 large storms travel the length of the state in June and i wonder if this impacted the migration. I typically raise 30+ monarchs, but this year only 11 successful monarchs were released. One cat I raised from an egg I lost due to Black Death. So 11 out of 12 were released successfully. My lesson learned is to not rely on the weather forecast you checked earlier in the day. In my case, clear skies were forecasted at noon for the remainder of the day. I felt comfortable releasing a monarch several hours later only to have the skies open up in a downpour an hour later.
2022 Season: Hi. I’m outside of Hartford Ct. in the woods. I released about 40 monarchs this year, raised from eggs in our garden and caterpillars I found in our garden. About 12 died in the caterpillar or chrysalis stage.
The first butterfly emerged in mid-July, and the last one left Sept. 3. This is about average for what happens on my porch. It’s all about the Mama monarch that lays her eggs around here, and this year I didn’t see ONE monarch in our garden (except the ones I released). Mama was very private with her laying the eggs, but it is also alarming not to have had any non-raised monarchs in our garden.
After July 9th, I’d only seen 2 Monarchs on different days. But success. I found 8 eggs. 1 ate Common Milkweed, the other 7 Swamp Milkweed. They all seemed healthy as they went into chrysallis. Found another 2. Down to the last one to emerge. 2 females, 7 males.
We are in the Endless Mountains of Northeastern PA, and did not see our first monarch or eggs on our common milkweed until mid-July. We raised primarily from eggs, picking up a cat here and there. In total, we released 39 healthy monarch butterflies.