Showing posts with label butterfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label butterfly. 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.
Saturday, June 24, 2017
“Treasures of OZ” celebrates nature in Ozaukee County
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| Queen's Lady's Slippers, Cedarburg Bog State Natural Area |
One of the highlights on a daylong tour of Ozaukee County
parks was this patch of Queen’s Lady’s Slipper blossoms. The rare orchid, also
known as “Showy” Lady’s Slipper for obvious reasons, has disappeared from much
of its former range because its preferred soggy habitat has also largely disappeared.
But there it was, almost within arm’s length, next to the narrow boardwalk that
allowed me to walk into Cedarburg Bog—prime orchid habitat.
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| Cedarburg Bog State Natural Area |
Like the flower, the opportunity to enter the boardwalk at
the Cedarburg Bog State Natural Area between Saukville and West Bend is also
rare. Operated for research and educational purposes as a U.W.—Milwaukee Field
Station, access is usually restricted. But as one of the “Treasures’ of OZ” the
bog is part of an annual celebration of parks, preserves and natural areas in
Ozaukee County.
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| Cedarburg Bog State Natural Area |
I was delighted. Although I’d been to the research station
before I’d never been out into the actual bog. The boardwalk led through
thickets and across a large pond covered in lily pads fringed with cattails.
The trail continued on over a couple of islands of solid ground before the
boardwalk resumed and plunged into the heart of the bog. Several species of
native Wisconsin orchids more diminutive than the Lady’s Slippers appeared here
and there.
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| Pitcher Plant, Cedarburg Bog State Natural Area |
Most exotic to me, however, were the pitcher plants, which
grew out of the waterlogged earth in abundance. The carnivorous plants were in
bloom, which was new to me. The blossoms, past prime, had lost their drooping
petals, leaving behind a flower head that resembled an alien satellite dish. Brightly
colored blossoms of many species speckled a landscape dominated by tangled
knots of stunted tamaracks. The boardwalk and the special event made it
possible to visit an otherwise impenetrable wilderness.
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| Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly, Ehlers County Park |
More than a clever marketing phrase, “Treasures of OZ” was billed
as an Eco-tour and Science Expo. The “expo” parts of the tour featured a wide
variety of interesting activities involving wildlife, science displays, food
vendors, music and a raffle. But clearly the real treasures of OZ are the natural
havens themselves.
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| Milwaukee River, Ehlers County Park |
In addition to Cedarburg Bog this year’s tour included two
county parks, a popular state park, and two preserves managed by the Ozaukee
Washington Land Trust. Being familiar with them already, I skipped Harrington
Beach State Park and Spirit Lake Nature Preserve. (Coincidentally, I included
Spirit Lake in my recent
story about five “hidden gems” of Milwaukee area parks.)
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| Ehlers County Park |
Ehlers County Park is a narrow strip of riparian land along
the Milwaukee River two miles north of Saukville on Highway W. It boasts a
prairie awash in wildflowers as well as 2,200 feet of shoreline. Scientists
with the Ozaukee County
Fish Passage Program and Milwaukee
Riverkeeper were on hand for the tour to demonstrate the diversity of fish
and macro-invertebrates in the Milwaukee River.
Kelly Ostrenga, with Milwaukee Riverkeeper, holds a rusty
crayfish, an example of a macro-invertebrate.
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| Tendick Nature County Park |
As I would learn belatedly, Tendick Nature County Park has
two segments. Since I foolishly neglected to consult either the Treasures of OZ
website or a map, I
turned in at the first segment I reached as I drove north on Highway O from
Saukville.
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| Tendick Nature County Park |
Surprised to find no one there, I nevertheless enjoyed the
prairie and magnificent clouds before heading back south without discovering
the second, larger and more popular segment. Sometimes you find what you’re
looking for…
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| Tendick Nature County Park |
…but if you remain alert you will discover what is all
around you.
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| Snapping Turtle, Forest Beach Migratory Preserve |
My final stop of the day was Forest Beach Migratory
Preserve, the epicenter of the Eco-tour and Science Expo. Randy Hetzel, a
genial and loquacious naturalist with a traveling wildlife collection, thrilled
a rapt crowd with a menagerie that included snakes, frogs and turtles. Having
experienced their ferocity in the wild, I was particularly amazed to see how
casually he and his teenage daughter handled a huge snapping turtle.
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| Buckeye Butterfly, Forest Beach Migratory Preserve |
Forest Beach is home to the Western
Great Lakes Bird and Bat Observatory. Its mission is to study
bird and bat populations and promote their conservation throughout the Western
Great Lakes region. After stopping indoors briefly to inspect the exhibits, I headed
out to explore the trails. I didn’t notice many birds—migration season has
passed—and it was too early in the day for bats. What I did see in astonishing
abundance were a wide variety of butterflies.
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| Forest Beach Migratory Preserve |
I had heard that the 116-acre preserve
had once been a golf course. As I wandered through the wildflowers with
butterflies fluttering all around me it was hard to imagine fairways and
greens. The thunderstorms that had been predicted never materialized but a
turbulent sky rose over a landscape that remained serene and entrancing. We
humans have little in common with orchids but like those delicate and sensitive
flowers we require a certain measure of nature in our lives. I know I do. And I
feel fortunate to live near enough to enjoy these treasured places.
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| Monarch Butterfly |
You can see more photos and additional treasures of Ozaukee
County on Flickr.
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.
Wednesday, August 31, 2016
Monarch migration celebration on Milwaukee County Grounds
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| Monarch waiting to be released to the wild (click to enlarge) |
The
Friends of the Monarch Trail held their annual celebration to mark the start of
the monarch butterfly migration season on Sunday, August 28. The Monarch Trail is located at
the north end of Innovation Park. It circles around the perimeter of the
now-complete Echelon Apartment complex. A large crowd of monarch admirers gathered
to bid safe travels to the butterflies as they begin their annual 2,500 mile
journey to Mexico.
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| The tour begins |
Festivities
included food, face painting, live music by Ceol Cairde “Music of Friends”, and
butterfly life-cycle displays. The main event was a tour guided of the trail by
Friends director Barb Agnew. She explained the significance of the County Grounds
as a roosting site and stopover for monarchs and described restoration efforts
undertaken by the Friends.
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| Trail includes interpretive signage |
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| Director Agnew leading tour |
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| Milwaukee skyline visible from the trail |
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| The oak grove |
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| Echelon Apartments backdrop the trail Monarch caterpillars on milkweed |
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| New plantings along the west berm section of the trail |
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| Stiff goldenrod in full bloom |
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| Monarch chrysalis display |
To see more photos of the County Grounds go to my Flickr album.
For more information about the Friends of the Monarch Trail visit www.theMonarchTrail.org
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