Showing posts with label butterflies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butterflies. Show all posts
Monday, August 28, 2017
Rain doesn't dampen enthusiasm at Monarch Trail event on County Grounds
The Monarch Trail is an 11-acre protected butterfly habitat that circles around the Echelon Apartments on the Innovation Campus of the Milwaukee County Grounds in Wauwatosa. It is currently awash in a magnificent spread of brown-eyed Susans.
The Friends of the Monarch Trail held their annual migration season kickoff celebration yesterday. Despite periods of light rain a good crowd enjoyed displays about monarch and other butterflies, the remarkable story of the 3000 mile migration, and the significance of the County Grounds as a roosting site. For the first time the event was held in the courtyard of the Echelon Apartment complex, in front of the recently renovated Eschweiler-designed historic Administration building. In a sign of the growing popularity of the event the Milwaukee County Parks Department provided a traveling beer tent and Cousins dispatched a food truck.
Ceole Cairde, the Irish ensemble, were on hand to provide musical accompaniment, as usual. A new feature this year was the McDonald family troupe of fife, drum and Irish dancers (above).
As if on cue, in the midst of all the merriment wild monarch butterflies quietly began to flutter into the courtyard and roost on the tree closest to the action (below). This bit of serendipity caused a sensation. Barb Agnew, the director of the Friends of the Monarch Trail considers it the precursor to what is likely to be an excellent season for butterfly watching. For updates on trail activities go to the Friends of the Monarch Trail website.
To see more photos of the Milwaukee County Grounds and Monarch Trail go to my Flickr album.
Monday, September 19, 2016
Monarchs return in force to the Monarch Trail
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I return before dawn on Saturday. A few clusters of monarchs
remain where I’d seen them the night before. But many already are letting go,
floating away on the breeze, like autumn leaves. The moon is still full. As I
watch it set beyond the trees I breathe an inaudible bon voyage to the monarchs setting off for Mexico.
I stand chest deep in flaming goldenrod and brilliant white
boneset—riveted by the sight of a dozen or so monarch butterflies on a single
clump of boneset. When a breeze tosses the flowers the butterflies all rise,
swirl around my head. But even more marvelous, as the breeze plays over the
field of wildflowers, dozens—maybe hundreds—more monarchs suddenly appear,
dipping, twirling and swerving all about.
Then, just beyond this amazing and beautiful dance of delicate
wildlife, a stream of rush hour traffic rumbles down Swan Boulevard.
I continue my walk along the Monarch Trail, which circles
around the recently completed Echelon Apartment complex at the north end of
Innovation Park on the Milwaukee County Grounds in Wauwatosa. On the west side
the trail runs along the top of a long, narrow berm crowned by dying poplars.
Here, next to Interstate 41, the growl of traffic is incessant. But butterflies
all over the hillside are oblivious to that.
It is monarch migration season. These fluttering, fragile
and remarkably resilient insects are pausing here on their incredible journey
from summer habitats in Canada to their winter retreat on a mountain in central
Mexico. The Monarch Trail and a friends group to maintain it were established in
2005 when it was feared that construction of Innovation Park might destroy the rare
and sensitive monarch roosting sites.
That fear appeared to be justified. As expected,
construction during the past several years created enough disturbance that the
numbers of monarchs stopping here during the annual migration dropped
precipitously. Despite this, the trail was diligently maintained and the
disturbed habitat reseeded with hundreds of native, wildlife-friendly plants. The
biggest concern remained: Would the dislodged monarchs ever return?
Seeing the numbers rebound is what makes this year’s
migration so exciting!
The migration occurs over several days and is not completely
predictable. I missed a big night on Thursday. Barb, the director of the
Friends, counted around 400 roosting that day alone. While not quite as many as
were seen prior to 2005, when as many as a thousand could be counted on a
single night on a single sycamore, she says there haven’t been this many since
2010. The full moon rising as they settled in for the night was a bonus.
I canceled my Friday evening plans so as not to miss them
all. I delight in watching them forage on the flowers and fly about, frustrated
only by the impossibility of conveying the magic of it all in a single still
photo. (I did try to capture a sense of what I was seeing in a short video,
which you can see on YouTube.)
The “urban wilderness” to which I so frequently refer has
always been a metaphor. In my urban explorations am drawn most often to places
where the urban is at least somewhat backgrounded by nature, where my
imagination can restore the sense of a wilderness if not the substance. It is a
worthwhile endeavor, I think, to love nature in this way, in a city. But here
on the Monarch Trail a stark truth is revealed. Wildlife doesn’t need to
imagine a wilderness. It just needs the right conditions on the ground.
Here, sandwiched between three-story apartment blocks and a
busy freeway, is nature sufficient to nourish these monarchs. Today’s
enchanting dance of the butterflies was far from inevitable, though. It took
substantial commitments of time and resources to save this place. Developers
were convinced to sacrifice a portion of their territory, scientists engineered
a restoration plan and volunteers put in thousands of hours. A few of them have
come to witness the fruit of their labor.
The work remains unfinished. The habitat, revitalized as it
has been, remains vulnerable. The many partners who have helped make this day
possible must continue their vigilance and commitment. And, sadly, new threats
continue to dog unprotected vestiges of the County Grounds that if lost will
adversely affect not only the monarchs, but many other species that might find
this place wild enough to flourish.
The celebrities of this story are the monarchs, of course. But
this story isn’t about butterflies as much as it is about us.
In fact, whether
we accept it or not, the fate of butterflies is inextricably tied to our own. It
is about the kind of world we want to live in, the kind of experiences we want
our children and grandchildren to have.
A few lines from a poem by Rumi comes
to mind:
What
will our children do in the morning
if they do not see us
fly?*
if they do not see us
fly?*
The Monarch Trail has proven that there are many people who
want butterflies to be part of their world. Three weeks ago hundreds of people
from all over the Milwaukee area attended an annual celebration hosted by the
Friends of the Trail to mark the beginning of the migration season (see previous
post.)
As dusk draws the flowers into shade, one by one the
butterflies begin to gather. They flutter toward the trees and cluster
together, clinging to leaves and bare branches. A small crowd of people stand
below, craning their necks to watch. Now and then the butterflies startle,
quivering their wings in unison, open and shut, open and shut. After a while
they are still. Then they vanish in deepening darkness.
A cloudbank obscures the moonrise.
But the sunset made up for it.
*To read the entire poem by Rumi, which is lovely, click
here.
To see more photos of the County Grounds go to my Flickr
album.
Monday, August 25, 2014
7th Annual Migration Celebration on the County Grounds a great success!
Yesterday the Friends of the Monarch Trail held their 7th Annual Migration Celebration on the Milwaukee County Grounds. The activities took place in the quadrangle of the Eschweiler buildings and around them in the butterfly habitat zone. It was a beautiful day!
Many of the usual activities took place. Butterflies were tagged and released. A long line of people took a tour of the Monarch Trail. Ceol Cairde once again provided lively Irish music.
A new addition this year was a "Moving for Monarchs" Program featuring dancer Gwynedd Vetter-Drusch. It became far more than a performance as Vetter-Drusch engaged with the large crowd, solicited interactive dance moves, and led everyone in a group dance celebrating the Monarch migration. It was lovely to see so many enthusiastic supporters dancing together. I was too enthralled myself to take photos during the group dance but here is Vetter-Drusch in butterfly costume performing later with Ceol Cairde.
Friday, August 15, 2014
Friends of the Monarch Trail invite you, your family and friends to the 7th Annual Migration Celebration!
As a friend of the Monarch Trail I am passing on the following invitation. Since its inception 7 years ago this celebration has become livelier and has drawn larger crowds each year. I hope you'll join me there!
Sunday, August 24, 2014, 4-7pm
See schedule of events below.
This FREE, family friendly event is dedicated to preserving and protecting Monarch butterflies and the fragile ecosystem they return to each year, the precious parcel of land known as the County Grounds.
The celebration takes place outdoors, rain or shine, at the Monarch Trail on the Milwaukee County Grounds, with plenty of parking available on Discovery Pkwy. and Eschweiler Dr. off Swan Blvd. Just look for the colorful flags and you'll find us! Please visit www.theMonarchTrail.org for a site map and more information.
This year’s event begins with a special interactive dance performance by Gwynedd Vetter-Drusch of the touring project “Moving for Monarchs,” and includes guided tours of the monarch trail, monarch release, plein air artists, lively Irish music by Ceol Cairde (Music of Friends), educational displays about Monarch butterflies, face painting, milkweed plants for sale, butterfly boutique items to benefit the Friends of the Monarch Trail and snacks too.
This is a great opportunity for artists, photographers, and videographers, especially during the Monarch release!
Schedule for the Event:
For more information, please call Barb Agnew at 414-454-0222 or visit www.theMonarchTrail.org
(Please share this information. We hope that everyone of all ages and all communities will be able to experience the wonder of all the creatures that inhabit the special place we care for so dearly: The County Grounds Monarch Trail.)
To see a selection of images from the County Grounds, go to my flickr set.
Sunday, August 24, 2014, 4-7pm
See schedule of events below.
![]() |
| Sunset from the Monarch Trail |
The celebration takes place outdoors, rain or shine, at the Monarch Trail on the Milwaukee County Grounds, with plenty of parking available on Discovery Pkwy. and Eschweiler Dr. off Swan Blvd. Just look for the colorful flags and you'll find us! Please visit www.theMonarchTrail.org for a site map and more information.
![]() |
| photo courtesy Moving for Monarchs |
This is a great opportunity for artists, photographers, and videographers, especially during the Monarch release!
Schedule for the Event:
- 4-4:50 pm - "Moving for Monarchs" Program featuring dancer Gwynedd Vetter-Drusch www.movingformonarchs.org
- 5 pm - Monarch Release
- 5:15-6:45 pm - Lively Irish Music by Ceol Cairde "Music of Friends" www.CeolCairde.com
- 5:30 & 6 pm - Guided Tours of the Monarch Trail
- 7 pm - 7th Annual Migration Celebration ends
For more information, please call Barb Agnew at 414-454-0222 or visit www.theMonarchTrail.org
(Please share this information. We hope that everyone of all ages and all communities will be able to experience the wonder of all the creatures that inhabit the special place we care for so dearly: The County Grounds Monarch Trail.)
To see a selection of images from the County Grounds, go to my flickr set.
Monday, April 21, 2014
Butterflies return to County Grounds - etched in concrete
If you live anywhere near the intersection of I-94 and I-894/Hwy 45 you probably received the latest edition of the Zoo Interchange Newsletter, as did I. It is full of maps and handy information about the progress of this massive--and massively disruptive--construction project. In addition the practical information about which ramps and roads are currently closed or under construction, you can learn about carpooling options and how much recycling the WisDOT is doing.
Did you know, for example, that the DOT "anticipates recycling the equivalent of 4,000 dump trucks full of concrete" in 2015? (What you won't learn from the newsletter is the good news that, as of yet at least, the concrete crushing that precedes all this recycling is not being done in the middle of the County Grounds.)
But what caught my eye right away was the small photograph in the lower right corner of the front page of the newsletter. It depicts "the butterfly wall" that recently has been completed under the Swan Boulevard bridge crossing Hwy 45. The concrete wall has been deeply etched with flowers and butterflies. It will be visible to motorists on Hwy 45 as they flash by. And also to anyone who uses the yet-to-be-completed underpass trail that will connect the new trail system in Innovation Park with the existing one in Wil-O-Way Woods on the north side of Swan.
The caption under the photo reads, "The 2013 Swan Boulevard project includes the construction of 'the butterfly wall' along US 45. The wall celebrates the migratory path of monarch butterflies."
Other recently rebuilt bridges sport similar designs. The airport spur has airplanes etched into the bridge abutments. The most interesting one, I think, is the I-43 bridge over Fon du Lac Avenue. In raised relief it commemorates the underground railroad and the struggle for civil rights.
I think it's great that the DOT is decorating the highways. They could go further, it seems to me. There are all those sound barriers being erected along the freeways to protect adjacent neighborhoods from the incessant noise. Why not liven them up with graphic designs?
But instead of cheering me up the butterfly wall saddens me. Last fall the migration that the wall celebrates was disappointing. It may have been temporary. It certainly was part of a larger problem that extended throughout the historic monarch migration routes and was most noticeable in the wintering grounds of Michoacan, Mexico.
Loss of habitat is the most often cited reason for the decline, as is the case with so many other animal species. At the County Grounds an 11-acre segment of the Innovation Park campus has been set aside as protected monarch habitat. With proper and persistent care and maintenance, perhaps it will enable the butterflies to return in future years. That is the hope.
For now we have concrete freeway walls etched with commemorative butterflies. I had to go see them for myself. With construction suspended for Easter Sunday I was able to do so. Here is what I saw.
The small sign in the center, erected by the Friends of the Monarch Trail, reads, "Butterfly habitat restoration project."
There is a second "butterfly wall" under construction along the unfinished cloverleaf ramp for the new Watertown Plank Road interchange.
A small wetland habitat next to the Eschweiler complex is staked with protective flags.
The boarded engineering building, part of the Eschweiler complex, awaits its fate: restoration if all goes well; demolition if not.
ABB is the first business to be located in the Innovation Park campus. The building is expected to open sometime this spring.
Labels:
butterflies,
butterfly,
concrete,
county grounds,
freeway,
habitat,
innovation park,
migration,
milwaukee county,
monarch,
wall,
wauwatosa
Monday, April 7, 2014
“Mingle for Monarchs” at Sugar Maple
The Friends of the Monarch Trail invite you to a FREE event:
“Mingle for Monarchs” at Sugar Maple
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m.
441 E. Lincoln Ave. Milwaukee, WI
Enjoy an evening with fellow supporters of the Monarch Trail for free appetizers, a cash bar and awesome silent auction items including:
~For Foodies~
Restaurant certificates to:
Café Manna, Pizza Shuttle, Le Reve, Blue’s Egg, Maxie’s, Centro Café, Milwaukee Food Tours, beverages from Horny Goat Hideaway, Sprecher, Great Lakes Distillery, and more!
~For those that appreciate nature or getting your hands in the dirt~
Gift basket from the Wild Ones, high class European garden tools, plants, Amish Craftsmen Guild Swallowtail Butterfly folding cabana reclining chair and certificates from Prairie Nursery and Fruit of the Bloom!
Other Silent Auction items:
Artwork and books from local artists, a dulcimer, Butterfly T-Shirts, Cream City Soap Co., tickets to: Milw. County Zoo, Discovery World, Milw. Admirals, Waukesha Skating, Landmark Theatre, Milw. Rep, and tours to: Sprecher, Great Lakes Distillery, and the Harley Davidson Museum!
The Friends are going to restore every area on the trail we possibly can to help bring back the monarchs! This will take resources to purchase plants as well as outreach and education for people who want to join in our effort.
.
Please share this invite and bring family, friends, co-workers and all Monarch Butterfly fans to come out to enjoy a fun evening of “Mingling for the Monarch Butterfly!”
We NEED you there to make this a fun & successful event!
Thank you!
To download an event poster and for more information, please visit www.themonarchtrail.org
Sneak preview: the silent auction includes a framed print of this sunset I shot at the Monarch Trail on the County Grounds.
“Mingle for Monarchs” at Sugar Maple
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
5:30 p.m. - 7 p.m.
441 E. Lincoln Ave. Milwaukee, WI
Enjoy an evening with fellow supporters of the Monarch Trail for free appetizers, a cash bar and awesome silent auction items including:
~For Foodies~
Restaurant certificates to:
Café Manna, Pizza Shuttle, Le Reve, Blue’s Egg, Maxie’s, Centro Café, Milwaukee Food Tours, beverages from Horny Goat Hideaway, Sprecher, Great Lakes Distillery, and more!
~For those that appreciate nature or getting your hands in the dirt~
Gift basket from the Wild Ones, high class European garden tools, plants, Amish Craftsmen Guild Swallowtail Butterfly folding cabana reclining chair and certificates from Prairie Nursery and Fruit of the Bloom!
Other Silent Auction items:
Artwork and books from local artists, a dulcimer, Butterfly T-Shirts, Cream City Soap Co., tickets to: Milw. County Zoo, Discovery World, Milw. Admirals, Waukesha Skating, Landmark Theatre, Milw. Rep, and tours to: Sprecher, Great Lakes Distillery, and the Harley Davidson Museum!
The Friends are going to restore every area on the trail we possibly can to help bring back the monarchs! This will take resources to purchase plants as well as outreach and education for people who want to join in our effort.
.
Please share this invite and bring family, friends, co-workers and all Monarch Butterfly fans to come out to enjoy a fun evening of “Mingling for the Monarch Butterfly!”
We NEED you there to make this a fun & successful event!
Thank you!
To download an event poster and for more information, please visit www.themonarchtrail.org
Sneak preview: the silent auction includes a framed print of this sunset I shot at the Monarch Trail on the County Grounds.
Saturday, February 22, 2014
Monarch Trail at Milwaukee County Grounds featured on TV
Followers of Urban Wilderness know that the Milwaukee County Grounds in Wauwatosa is among my favorite places. I try to keep abreast of ongoing developments. One of the most significant among many remarkable features of that diverse urban landscape is the Monarch butterfly migration. Historically, migrating Monarchs have roosted there in great numbers. It is one of the few known roosting sites in the region. The planners and developers of Innovation Park, UWM's research accelerator and business campus, have honored the phenomenon by setting aside an 11-acre portion of their development zone as butterfly habitat. And there is a dedicated group of volunteers who maintain the Monarch Trail for the ever increasing throngs of people who have discovered how beautiful it is.
Of course none of this is happening in February, so you may be wondering why I bring it up.
Last August, when it was happening, MPTV sent a camera crew to cover the story and interview some of the principle people involved. These include the indefatigable leader of the Friends of the Monarch Trail, Barb Agnew, and Sue Borkin, a biologist with the Milwaukee Public Museum. The video they created has just been released. You can see it on Adelante!
The video explains the unique character of the Monarch migration, the significance of the County Grounds as a stopover on that migration, and threats to the Monarch population and the continuation of the migration. These threats include the loss of critical species like milkweed (below), which is the Monarch caterpillar's only source of nutrients. The video also shows the Friends of the Monarch Trail leading the effort to involve more people in preservation and enjoyment of the site (above).
Although Adelante! is a Spanish language program, don't be deterred by the introduction, which is in Spanish with English subtitles. The people who are interviewed during the segment all speak in English. The Monarch segment is at the beginning of the program and lasts about ten minutes.
Check it out: Monarch Migration.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Blue Moon event on the Milwaukee County Grounds
This annual event sponsored by the Friends of the Monarch Trail is always lovely. The full moon makes it especially wonderful. There are few places in the Milwaukee metropolitan region better than the County Grounds to watch the sunset and moonrise simultaneously.
For more information go to Monarch Trail.
Labels:
blue moon,
butterflies,
county grounds,
monarch trail,
moonrise,
sunset,
wauwatosa
Tuesday, August 31, 2010
Milwaukee County Grounds update: the Monarch Trail is aflutter!
Last evening, as I pulled into the Parks Administration building’s parking lot and drove to the back corner, there were over a dozen cars already lined up along the edge closest to the beginning of the Monarch Trail. The word must be out!
I took the short cut across the open field, cleared for UWM’s planned developments there. I walked through the knee-high clover and grasses towards the Eschweiler buildings and the inviting stands of trees around them. The sun had disappeared behind a huge thunderhead that seemed poised to expand across the whole sky and glowed red around its edges. I saw people strolling along the Trail atop the berms adjacent to Swan Blvd.
As I neared the Eschweiler campus I caught up with LuAnn, one of the Monarch Trail regulars, and her niece Kailey. They led me to a small group of Milkweed in front of the main administration building where they’d seen a praying mantis before. Sure enough, there it was. Kailey scooped it up gently and it skittered nervously up her arm. She put it back onto the nearest Milkweed where it quickly scuttled under a leaf and clung there as the plant bobbed in the breeze.
[Click on images to enlarge.]

Barb Agnew, the director of the Monarch Trail saw us and called to come see, quick! She was near the giant sycamore tree that the Monarchs favor. She was excited because there were several clumps of butterflies already roosting in the lower branches of the box elders surrounding the sycamore. There were also six or seven people treading carefully among the tall grasses and raspberry bushes on the well worn paths to see them.
I was surprised and delighted to see my friends Joyce and Darthe with their two furry dogs, who told me that this was their first trip out to the Trail. I told them how lucky they were to come on such an auspicious night. More butterflies fluttered in by the minute now that the sun was down and the light dimming quickly. As each new Monarch flew up to a branch laden with already resting ones, the whole clump would startle, opening their wings briefly before settling back into roosting posture. It was a marvelous sight.
A warm wind blew in from the south and west in gusts cutting the humidity and keeping down the mosquitoes. The perfect evening to view the migration, I thought. Barb looked at me even more excitedly and said “No, no! These are local butterflies. The migration hasn’t reached here yet. This is going to be a very good year!”
As it darkened and we began to leave, Kailey show up again with a second mantis. This one posed like a debutante for the photographers, as you can see.
For my previous post on the recent Monarch Trail sunset/moonrise celebration, click here.
For more pictures of the County Grounds, click here.
I took the short cut across the open field, cleared for UWM’s planned developments there. I walked through the knee-high clover and grasses towards the Eschweiler buildings and the inviting stands of trees around them. The sun had disappeared behind a huge thunderhead that seemed poised to expand across the whole sky and glowed red around its edges. I saw people strolling along the Trail atop the berms adjacent to Swan Blvd.
As I neared the Eschweiler campus I caught up with LuAnn, one of the Monarch Trail regulars, and her niece Kailey. They led me to a small group of Milkweed in front of the main administration building where they’d seen a praying mantis before. Sure enough, there it was. Kailey scooped it up gently and it skittered nervously up her arm. She put it back onto the nearest Milkweed where it quickly scuttled under a leaf and clung there as the plant bobbed in the breeze.
[Click on images to enlarge.]

Barb Agnew, the director of the Monarch Trail saw us and called to come see, quick! She was near the giant sycamore tree that the Monarchs favor. She was excited because there were several clumps of butterflies already roosting in the lower branches of the box elders surrounding the sycamore. There were also six or seven people treading carefully among the tall grasses and raspberry bushes on the well worn paths to see them.
I was surprised and delighted to see my friends Joyce and Darthe with their two furry dogs, who told me that this was their first trip out to the Trail. I told them how lucky they were to come on such an auspicious night. More butterflies fluttered in by the minute now that the sun was down and the light dimming quickly. As each new Monarch flew up to a branch laden with already resting ones, the whole clump would startle, opening their wings briefly before settling back into roosting posture. It was a marvelous sight.
A warm wind blew in from the south and west in gusts cutting the humidity and keeping down the mosquitoes. The perfect evening to view the migration, I thought. Barb looked at me even more excitedly and said “No, no! These are local butterflies. The migration hasn’t reached here yet. This is going to be a very good year!”For my previous post on the recent Monarch Trail sunset/moonrise celebration, click here.
For more pictures of the County Grounds, click here.
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