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by Tony Gomez

A year ago

Raising Book Resources

Raising Hope for the 2023 Monarch Migration- Share Your Raise The Migration Results

A year ago

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By Tony Gomez

Raise the Migration 2023- Share Your Experience Raising Monarch Butterflies

by Tony Gomez

A year ago

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 2023 experience and raise it forward…

Raise the Migration 2023- Share Your Experience Raising Monarch Butterflies

The raising season is coming to an end, so we’d love to hear how many butterflies you released for fall’s annual 2023 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 how to raise monarchs book (choose paperback or PDF download) please check out the monarch raising guide by clicking this butterfly photo:

Raising Monarch Butterflies Book

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:

2022- 100% Survival Rate

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 2023 Results

Monarch Eggs from Raise The Migration 2023- Share Your Experience


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 a few years back when I forgot to close a cage door and found a caterpillar crawling on top of the cage. 🐛 😱


Unexplained Caterpillar Deaths

None


Caterpillar Diseases and Parasites?

None


Accidental Deaths?

I carelessly removed a small caterpillar that was getting ready to molt inside the plastic food container. It was not able to fully shed its skin and did not survive. 


Chrysalis Problems

None


Butterfly Eclosure Issues

None


Final Results

Our totals will be taken from all eggs that have successfully hatched in our care. We don't count eggs that were parasitized outside or monarchs brought in as caterpillars because they could have parasites too.

This year, we ended up with 9 migration generation monarchs...all have been 'unintentional' after pulling wayward egg-upied common milkweed coming up in the lawn.

So how many survived to reach butterhood?

1 accidental death

0 disease or parasite issues

unexplained deaths

3 healthy males

healthy females

89% survival rate


Lessons Learned

There have been a few lessons learned throughout this season and it's the result of having a new outdoor raising setup.

In past seasons, we raised in a 3-season porch with the windows open, which protected growing monarchs from extreme weather, while still exposing them to environmental cues telling them to migrate. This year, we raised outdoors and barely avoided a couple catastrophes:

  • Protect the cage from heavy rains above- we did this by placing the cage on a bench under an evergreen. On the other side of the deck, we place cages under the awning (prevents drownings and falling chrysalides)
  • If heavy rain is forecast, consider removing the poo poo platter so rain doesn't pool on the cage floor (prevents drownings)
  • Protect monarchs from strong winds- we ended up using two paver bricks in each cage (prevents cages from falling or blowing away)
  • Crowded Caterpillars often Pupate on Milkweed Leaves- We used smaller cages this season and having to use two pavers inside each minimized space which made plant leaves too enticing to form chrysalides
  • If a caterpillar pupates on a leaf that's OK, but separate it from feeding caterpillars (prevents chrysalis from falling to floor if leaf gets eaten)
  • Use your magnifier- our lone accidental death of '23 could have been prevented if I used it to see that a small caterpillar I moved was actually molting. (When you see better, you do better!)
  • Keep Cages away from Predators- we have been lucky with insects and larger predators chewing through the cage to this point, but there is always a greater chance you will have issues with an outdoor raising setup

We were very lucky this season was a success. On a windy night, the cage nearly blew off the table it was on becuase I was using rocks instead of the heavier paver bricks to secure the stage. This could have severely injured or killed most of our brood

I much prefer the indoor setup with exposure to natural outdoor conditions. We will be investing in a greenhouse or arboretum for raising purposes next season and will keep you posted. 

 

Migration Memories 2023

Our Mexican sunflowers were a big hit with migrating monarchs, swallowtails, hummingbirds, and bees this season. Here's a Minnesota Migration Moment from early September:


...and here's our final release monarch female stocking up on nectar September 20th:


I hope you enjoyed reading about my Raise The Migration '23 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 at the bottom of this page and let 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 2023

189 comments


  • Monarchs have been very few this summer. I did not get my first monarch till July 7. I have now released 19 successfully but this time last year I had released at least 70 and a total of 107 for the whole season last summer . I am getting a few of my released monarchs laying eggs.

    Jan Saliba on

  • As of 8-22-2o23 I have released 43 Monarchs: 19 males, 21 females, and 3 unidentified. All looked healthy. No parasites this year, nor diseases that I could identify. Accidental deaths: 2 owing to my inattention to zipper safety. Chrysalis problems: 2. One caterpillar decided to do a J on a leaf at the bottom of the container. I trimmed the leaf and taped it to a lid for proper hanging room. The other caterpillar seemed to have wiggled itself free of everything. I had nothing to work with for reattachment. It is currently laying on its side in a small cage. Neither of these are ready to emerge. Enclosure issues were my fault. Lessons learned: Check for wayward caterpillars before opening the mesh cage. Floral tubes are totally awesome work savers and will probably increase my hatchling count next year. Read the book Monarchs and Milkweed: A Migrating Butterfly, a Poisonous Plant, and Their Remarkable Story of Coevolution by Anurag Agrawal and loved it. Got more info on milkweed pests, ideas for growing milkweed, and learned of more ways for caterpillars to meet untimely deaths. I’m not done with the season here in Davenport, IA. I’m currently waiting for 14 monarchs to emerge. I have 9 hatchlings feeding and 4 eggs still to hatch. I’m doing quite a bit better than last year at this time. Which is something since I had no egg laying in my urban garden for a 30 day period. Thank you for gathering this information and for all your work producing a great website.

    Mary Davidsaver on

  • Such a late start to the year almost 2 months late in fact. Didn’t take in my first eggs until the end of July almost. Panicking surging every teeny tiny little milkweed Sprout every single day as mama loves to lay her eggs on the tiniest tiniest microscopic little leaves instead of the big raging plants LOL that being said I have an absolute ton of milkweed growing in my Gardens as well I live in an area that is abundant with wild milkweed in the Niagara region of Ontario Canada. My season is not done as I’m still collecting eggs but so far I have released 91 very healthy monarchs with no failures in the caterpillar or monarch state. Although that might sound like a good number I normally raise between $800 and 1,000 a year. Today I have another 15 e closing and I’m very sad that my tags have not arrived yet. But I do have about 60 cats and 15 eggs still to go with still another 40 Chrysalis also. Unfortunately I could only afford and thought I would only need 100 tags so that’s all that will be getting tagged. I have to run as the sun has just risen nice and high and the butters are coming the butters are coming. I will update again in another month

    TracyLynn~ Mother Of Monarchs~ Caughill on

  • Hi from Windsor CT. It’s 8/21 and I have only seen 3 Monarchs thus far. I did raise and released one, a female, last month. I had two eggs that hatched, one died within a few days, the other one is tiny and isn’t really interested in eating the milkweed. I have one chrysalis that developed 8/19 and I found 3 eggs a few days ago and I have them in a closed container. I’m very disappointed about this decline. Lack of habitat and the weather is a concern.

    Laura Mycka on

  • I had a fantastic volume of eggs and cats this yr. My total to date is 115 with 4 mortality’s and 3 dud eggs🤷‍♀️ not counted in my tally. Still 2 chrysalis to go…hope the weather holds.
    My #’s went from 12 to 63 almost overnight so changed my MO to 5 small containers of marbles… water level just below top of marbles and 4..5 leafy cuttings of MW jammed into marbles.
    I had 2 clean containers on standby to switch out as the herd mowed thru their MW forest.
    I cleaned and restocked them 3X a day!
    Good to be retired to have the time for these precious little creatures. Females outnumbered males 3 to 1 or more.
    And the reward was to see them all graduate and fly way. After that rush I have been looking after smaller numbers of 10 to 12 at a time. God bless them everyone.
    2022 was sad yr as I struggled to find 7.
    This year sure made up for that!💕👏👏

    Gerrie Wright on

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