Raising Book Resources
Raising Hope for the 2024 Monarch Migration- Share Your 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 2024 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 2024 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 milkweed 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:

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:
2023- 89% Survival Rate
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 2024 Results
This seems to be a year of few monarchs for many, after a promising early start in May. Based on reports from the community, I have a couple of ideas on what has been negatively impacting the eastern population migration numbers in 2024:
- City mosquito spraying- these harmful chemicals pretty much destroy your entire garden ecosystem, including monarchs in all stages
- Excessive rains- paired with cooler temps this combo slows down metamorphosis and can also drown caterpillars that fall off plants.
- Late Migration?
On September 17th, 2024 there's more than a dozen migrators fluttering around our Minnesota garden. This is the most we've seen all season, so I'm hopeful this late summer weather, allows more butterflies to finish the life cycle and migrate.
For our lucky 7 this season...
Caterpillar Escapes
none 🥳
Unexplained Caterpillar Deaths
none 🥳
Caterpillar Diseases and Parasites?
none 🥳 We were lucky because we brought in two caterpillars this year and neither was parasitized by flies.
Accidental Deaths?
none 🥳
Chrysalis Problems
none 🥳
Butterfly Eclosure Issues
none 🥳
Final Results
Our totals are 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 7 monarchs...4 were unintentionally brought in after a wind storm knocked down a large stock of common milkweed. The other egg was accidentally brought in getting milkweed for the other 4. The final monarch caterpillars were brought in from our water feature swamp milkweed and a common milkweed growing through a crack in our deck.
So how many survived to reach butterhood?
The first female eclosed on Labor Day, the last male eclosed on a very sultry September 17th...87°F
0 accidental deaths
0 disease or parasite issues
0 unexplained deaths
6 healthy males
1 healthy female
100% survival rate (5 from egg, 2 from caterpillar)
Lessons Learned
We raised outdoors on our uncovered porch again, which I do not recommend because it adds dangerous factors that are out of your control including:
- extreme wind
- soaking rains
- cool night time temps (in northern regions this slows down metamorphosis)
- predator issues (some insects and animals can chew through cages, and stink bugs can harpoon caterpillars through mesh)
- pesticide drift (especially if neighbors or the city spray for mosquitoes)
To protect them from outdoors condition we:
- put the cage under pine tree branches to block rain
- put a clear tarp over the cage to bock rain, but let in more light (as opposed to a solid color tarp)
- put two pavers inside the cage so it wouldn't blow away
- put a flat rock on floral tube rack so it wouldn't blow over

You can easily expose monarchs to natural heat, light, and humidity (without extreme conditions) by raising them on a screened-in (or at least covered) porch and then you don't have to worry about taking extra precautions.
Migration Memories 2024
Two memories stand out during the 2024 migration season
1. Dueling hummingbirds (the OTHER migrators)- we typically have one hummingbird that claims our garden plants and feeder and challengers are chased off quickly.
This year's challenger would not be denied, so I've actually seen them feeding together in between car chase scenes...perhaps the garden is big enough for BOTH of them? 😅 Of course, getting them both on camera/video has proven more difficult.
2. Milkweed IN Water- last fall we left a milkweed container submerged in our water feature and this season, it came back, flowered, and was the milkweed plant I retrieved our final caterpillar from.


I typically don't bring in caterpillars but there were strong storms coming and our resident leopard frog was lurking below, which put our last caterpillar in double jeopardy...

Thankfully, we found the caterpillar before the frog did.
Unfortunately, Mr. (or Ms.?) frog did snatch a giant swallowtail butterfly from the lantana on the ledge of the water feature. To keep the feature from becoming a butterfly death trap, we moved a large mum to that ledge, and moved the butterfly-attracting lantana to our deck. Live and Learn 🦋🐸😱
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I hope you enjoyed reading about my Raise The Migration '24 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 2024
116 comments
This is my 5th year of raising Monarchs. I live in Southern Ca, about 1.5 miles from the ocean, so a fairly cool climate. The monarchs obviously know where to come, because they zone in on my condo unit each year!. I have had the opportunity through our HOA to plant Milkweed in a large area, but I have many plants around my unit. Both native (narrow leaf) and the tropical (which I cut back and take the leaves off of each fall). We had very late arrivals this year. Late May? and they seem to have ended very early as well, late August, as far as egg laying goes. I still see a few Monarchs flying, and my last chrysalis hatched today. We usually have eggs well into October! I raise some from eggs in cages each year, this year was very good, 84 in total. But the fact that the season has ended so quickly concerns me. Oddly I have 2 catepillars on a plant in a cage that have not grown at all in over 2 weeks. Just waiting to see what will happen. I have learned that if a catepillar is not doing well, I will freeze it :( to prevent spread of disease.
Hello from SE Michigan…Harsens Island, on the Canadian border! I successfully released 64 butterflies. The first batch (13) at the beginning of July, and the rest in the past 2 weeks, so many migrators! I lost two caterpillars. One to a mystery illness and the other was unable to molt. Most valuable lesson this year was with that many migrators I had to find a second source for safe milkweed other than my own patch. They eat so much! I really appreciated having 2 Big Cubes and 4 trays with Fat Cat floral tubes from this website. I raised them all in an enclosed porch.
Columbus, OH
We found 5 eggs and successfully raised and released them. Usually we find around 160-200. I only saw 2 Monarchs this year.
Had a very poor year,last year 92 left this year I had 2 died,very small worms.This year 26 have left, very happy with them all healthy!I had a lot of milk weed,but not many Butterflies.Thanks for the news letter,and your updates! RM, Lancaster, Pa
I have “raised” Monarchs for about eight years. I planted milkweed along a 20 foot section of wooden fence, and for the first five years the caterpillars would climb the fence and form their cocoons there. I would see upwards of 70 transform into beautiful butterflies yearly. However, about three years ago, I observed that, heartrendingly, cocoons would disappear without a trace overnight. Thinking raccoons, opossums, or other rodents, I erected all manner of screens and barriers to protect the cocoons, but the thefts continued. Finally this year I discovered the culprits: LIZARDS! These little b*stards eat the caterpillars, and right in front of me, to my horror, I saw one eat a cocoon. I purchased a butterfly cage, and started caging the cocoons and caterpillars the instant I see them. This year I’ve raised about 40 in this manner, and next year I’ll switch to a full-fledged effort collecting the eggs and putting them in the cage. I also found out that I have many praying mantis bugs in my garden, and they are apparently also a Monarch predator. But I will fight back: I REFUSE to let these beautiful and gentle creatures disappear form our Planet.