Credit: Wikimedia Commons: Kenneth Dwain Harrelson |
The Last American Highway: A Journey Through Time Down U.S. Route 83: The Dakotas is very much a book about
what I encountered on a trip down U.S. 83 in September 2009. The people, the
scenery and the history.
And unfortunately, one thing
I encountered a lot during those two weeks were Monarch butterflies. Or to be
more specific, my 1999 Mazda Protégé encountered them.
The numerous butterflies
whose lives I accidentally terminated as my car sliced through the prairie air
became the subject of a brief passage in the book. It is one of two only two
excerpts I have released so far when I posted it in this blog Sept. 16, 2013. (Read it
below). The butterflies in the fall begin a long migration from as far north as
Canada down to Mexico, as the excerpt explains. They funnel over the southern
part of Texas that roughly corresponds with Highway 83 as it travels from
Laredo to Brownsville.
One angle I did not address
in the passage was all the additional obstacles other than cars Monarchs encounter as they make
their long trip.
They end up in a valley in
Mexico, which has become a tourist destination over the last few years.
Unfortunately, during the last two decades, the amount of acres that the Monarchs
cover after they reach their destination has shrunk dramatically from 45 acres
of forest to 1.6 acres.
Why their numbers are
collapsing is the key question.
Loss of habitat in Mexico
seems to be one reason. They also rely on milkweed to lay their eggs and
large-scale farming in Canada and the United States is killing off this native
plant.
The article says they won’t
go extinct, but the whole amazing migration where a single butterfly travels
3,000 miles to make it to Mexico may end. That would be a shame.
Last fall, I met two girls
and their mother outside my local supermarket who were selling brownies and
cookies. They were only $1 each so I as I bought one, I asked why they were
fundraising for. They were going to set up a Monarch butterfly habitat in their
backyard. I think I had nine bucks on me. I bought a lot more brownies, and
then just gave them the few dollars I had left.
Here is a link to a website that says it will mail you free milkweed seeds for the asking, or for a small donation. I plan on planting some in the spring with my daughter in a small patch
of wooded land where I live (whether my condo association realizes it or not!)
I hope others do the same.
Maybe that will make up in
some small way for the carnage my car bumper and windshield caused back in
2009.
Stew Magnuson is the author of The Last American Highway: A Journey Through Time Down U.S. Route 83: The Dakotas, now available at Amazon.com. To learn how
to order signed copies, message him at stewmag (a) yahoo.com.
The following is a brief excerpt from the forthcoming book, The Last American Highway: A Journey Through Time Down U.S. Route 83: The Dakotas. It takes place just south of Minot, N.D., September 2009.
A Monarch butterfly flitters out of nowhere, hits my
windshield, and tumbles away to the pavement.
I wince.
One can avoid hitting a squirrel, rabbit or pheasant. But
when a butterfly flies in front of a car, there’s nothing that can be done
about it. They hit the windshield and fall on the road like dead leaves in
autumn.
This isn’t the first time I had struck a Monarch since I
left on the trip. There were others. The previous evening at a gas station in
Minot, as the pump was filling up the tank, I took a sopping wet windshield cleaner
and started to remove the layer of bug splotches covering the glass.
Making my way around the car, I noticed a perfectly
preserved Monarch on the grill, just above the bumper. Its wings were
fluttering and for a moment, I thought it was still alive, but it was just the
wind. I gently removed it.
The Monarchs I have been inadvertently slaughtering are also
traveling south. The orange and black-winged Lepidoptera was traveling even
farther than me, though. It’s believed that the Monarchs of the Northern Plains
are the only species of butterfly to migrate. The one that hit my windshield
was heading south to winter in the warm central mountains of Mexico. Highway 83
runs 1,885 miles.
It seems almost
impossible to me that something so delicate
intended to fly 1,000 miles beyond the road’s terminus. The migration
begins in Canada around August and continues until the first frosts.
The butterfly I killed would have stopped
along the way to fill its abdomen with sunflower nectar, and made its way
south, gliding on the winds as often as it could to preserve its strength. Like
the route, it would have passed over South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma
and finally Texas, where it would meet up with millions of other Monarchs.
They all funnel over the South Texas borderlands, making
their way to fir forests, 10,000 feet above sea level on the tops of
transvolcanic mountains, where they spend the winter. They mate, and finally
die from exhaustion. Their offspring begin the journey north around the second
week of March. They lay their eggs along the way in South Texas. Through the
spring and summer, each generation flies a little farther north until the
great-great-great grand-Lepidoptera emerge from their cocoons in the fields of
High Plains. It’s these offspring, the ones I’m encountering now, that begin
the nearly 3,000 mile journey to Mexico.
This is why I wince when I strike a Monarch in North Dakota
in early September.
I will kill dozens of them during the next two weeks, and I
will mourn each and every one of them.
The grasshoppers. Not so much.
To join the Fans of U.S. Route 83 group on Facebook, CLICK HERE. And check out the U.S. Route 83 Travel page at www.usroute83.com.
To join the Fans of U.S. Route 83 group on Facebook, CLICK HERE. And check out the U.S. Route 83 Travel page at www.usroute83.com.
Stew
Magnuson (stewmag (a) yahoo.com) is the author of Wounded Knee 1973: Still Bleeding: The American Indian
Movement, the FBI, and their Fight to Bury the Sins of the Past published by the Now & Then Reader. It is available as an
eBook on Kindle, Nook, Kobo and iTunes. Buy it in paperback on Amazon or bookstores such as Plains Trading
Company Booksellers, in Valentine, Neb., on Highway 83.
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