The
roosting has begun - they are on the move! Actually its been a few
days now, just getting the time to get around to reporting it. But WOW
we're having a fun time here with the show in the pasture each day and
in the yard in the evening and morning!
(I partially blurred the number so our Florida
friend wouldn't get too many phone calls!)
This
morning we had a "late" roost...they're usually out and
dispersed/feeding by mid morning but today they were still roosting and
clustering here and there out of the brisk wind. It was 10:50 am when
Georgie came and got me to look, as she'd been out doing chores and was
seeing lots of action.
I
brought the camera out and was watching all the roosts and amazed they
hadn't dispersed when I saw a tag! I photographed this on one of the
soft maples on the north side of our grove, out of the wind...just
sitting and resting. And no wonder!
I
called the tag number and spoke with a gentleman from Florida who was
staying in Wisconsin, visiting his daughter. He took the tag number and
his daughter looked it up and found she had tagged "this very" Monarch
individual on August 20th in Franksville, Wisconsin - north of Milwaukee
about 10 miles - along Lake Michigan.
I
don't want to name the person without his permission but he has been
doing research on Monarchs for the past 10 years and started his
research in Florida. Florida Monarchs are unique in that they don't
migrate - they are a resident population. There is a parasite that
Florida Monarchs are experiencing and they have been tagging these
Monarchs and taking small samples from their abdomens (doesn't harm
them) to check for the parasite...he referred to it as the "OE"
parasite. They do this work through the University of Georgia and have
160 volunteers in Florida doing the work. Now his daughter is also
tagging and checking the Monarchs (our migratory Monarchs bound for
Mexico) and this one was tagged there in Wisconsin August 20th - very
cool!!!
So far this Monarch has been flying due west of where it was tagged! Maybe it heard we have loads of flowers here for nectaring (tongue-in-cheek)!?! No wonder this poor critter was just intent to rest this morning...that's a long flight over the past 16 days!
I hope this Monarch makes it's way all the way to Mexico and we can hear from it again...wouldn't that be the greatest story!!!
Keep an eye out and enjoy the sight, soon they will depart...
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