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Title: Winter Butterflies in Bolinas
Author: Mary D. Barber
Release Date: September 8, 2021 [eBook #66247]
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
Produced by: Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WINTER BUTTERFLIES IN BOLINAS ***
Monarch Butterflies and Daffodils in January
WINTER BUTTERFLIES
IN BOLINAS
BY
MARY D. BARBER
PUBLISHED BY
PAUL ELDER & COMPANY
SAN FRANCISCO
2
Copyright, 1918 by
MARY D. BARBER
3
The Monarch Butterfly
Anosia Plexippus is a familiar
object in many parts of
4
the United States, but the fact
that it migrates, covering in
its flights hundreds and even
thousands of miles, is not
generally known. This butterfly
appears in immense
swarms every year early in
September at Bolinas, a sheltered
haven on the coast of
California, about ten miles
north of the Golden Gate.
A southerly beach walled
by high bluffs, a quaint little
village which consists of trim
cottages set in pretty, old-fashioned
5
gardens; wide stretches
of sunny mesa, broken
here and there by arroyos
and groves of cypress trees,
make up a picturesque landscape;
while to the south and
westward rolls the vast Pacific,
the ceaseless surging of its
surf on the smooth sand a
never-ending delight to the
ear. This is the winter home
of the Monarch butterfly
which comes not only from
the Sierra Nevada mountains
but also from the western
6
ranges of the Rockies.
On the meadows of these
mountains a pale green caterpillar,
ornamented with glossy
black bands, feeds on the
leaves of the milkweed plant.
This caterpillar forms a chrysalis
about an inch long, green
spotted with gold. The Monarch
butterfly emerges from
this chrysalis, unfurls its
wings, draws its sustenance
from the milkweed blossoms,
lays its eggs and lives happily
in the high altitudes till the
7
chill of approaching autumn
in the air warns it that the
time for migrating has come.
Thousands of these frail butterflies
start on their long
journey toward the Pacific,
in search of a mild climate,
free from frost and snow,
in which they can live all
winter.
Fly brown butterflies out to sea,
Frail pale wings for the winds to try;
Small brown wings that we scarce can see
Fly.
8
Here and there may a chance caught eye
Note, in a score of you, twain or three
Brighter or darker of tinge or dye;
Some fly light as a laugh of glee,
Some fly soft as a long, low sigh;
All to the haven where each would be—
Fly.
In Nevada County great
flocks of them have been seen,
following the course of a
stream downwards from the
mountains towards the sea.
Before they reach the end of
9
their journey they scatter, for
although they appear in Bolinas
suddenly and in large
numbers, no flock has ever
been seen approaching en
masse.
The Monarch is of a reddish
chestnut-brown, veined
with black and bordered with
a band of black which is ornamented
by two rows of
small white spots. The under
side of the wings is paler, an
ashy buff color similarly
veined and bordered. The
10
butterfly is large, measuring
between four and five inches
from tip to tip of outstretched
wings.
When these butterflies arrive,
the air seems full of
them, hovering, flitting, whirling
like brown autumn leaves
caught in a gust of wind.
Having reached their winter
home they swarm on a cypress
tree which affords the best
shelter during wind and
storm. Each year they come,
not only to the same grove,
11
but to the very same tree,
and always to the southerly
and easterly side of it. This
tree is within sight and sound
of the surf which perhaps
reminds the butterflies of the
roar of rushing streams and
waterfalls in the mountains
whence they came. Is it instinct,
or scent, or the climatic
advantage of some especial
tree which guides them in
their choice? It is certainly a
mystery that a newly arrived
flock should choose the identical
12
tree which was the home
of their predecessors the winter
before; for they migrate
but to end their days, and can
not return to show the way
to their progeny which will
hatch next spring into stupid
caterpillars having no desire
but to eat till their time for
sleep arrives. The instinct or
intelligence of the awakened
butterfly is inexplicable.
On sunny days the Monarchs
feast on the flowers that
bloom all winter in the village
13
gardens, calla lilies, marguerites
and heliotrope being
their favorites. One day a bee
and a butterfly were vying
with each other for the possession
of a marguerite. The
butterfly alighted on it first,
but the bee buzzed his way
in under the wings of his rival
who, realizing that his
companion was dangerous,
flew off, leaving the bee sole
possessor of the coveted flower.
At evening the Monarchs
return to the grove where
14
they may be seen hanging on
the cypress branches. A tree
appears brown, as if covered
with dead leaves, as the butterflies,
in countless thousands
hang close together with folded
wings to conserve the
warmth of their frail bodies.
In stormy weather they remain
thus dormant for days
and even weeks, benumbed
by the cold, yet clinging fast
to the branches. Many, however,
are wrenched from their
places of refuge and lie scattered
15
on the ground like a
carpet of fallen leaves.
One evening a number of
these which had hardly a
spark of life remaining in
their water-soaked bodies as
they lay on the grass, were
picked up and brought into
the house where a fire of driftwood
blazed bright on the
hearth. The butterflies soon
revived in the warm atmosphere,
hung themselves to the
curtains in lieu of trees and
went to sleep for the night.
16
Next morning dawned bright
and clear. The captive Monarchs
awakened early and
flew away, happy, when the
window was opened to release
them.
The many birds that
choose Bolinas as their winter
home would have a feast
if these butterflies were edible,
but Monarchs are protected
by an acrid secretion which
is distasteful to birds, and enjoy
a long life on this account,
living not only all winter,
17
but long enough to taste the
sweetness of the spring wildflowers.
The Monarchs are great
migrants. They have crossed
the Pacific Ocean, probably
on ships, and have reached
the Philippine Islands and
Australia.
When on a yacht bound for
the Farallone Islands members
of the party saw one of
these butterflies soaring over
the ocean about ten miles
from shore. It did not rest
18
on the boat, but with wings
spread before the east wind it
sped away, following the path
of the setting sun like a soul
in quest of the ideal. That
evening a storm came on suddenly.
What was the fate of
that lone butterfly?
He died, unlike his mates I ween,
Perhaps not sooner or worse crossed;
And he had felt, thought, known and seen
A larger life and hope, though lost
Far out at sea.
21
This is the tale of the Winter Butterflies
in Bolinas, as told by Mary D. Barber,
and put into permanent form by Paul
Elder and Company under the direction
of Ricardo J. Orozco during the month
of January of the year Nineteen Eighteen,
with decorations by Rudolph F. Schaeffer.
Transcriber’s Notes
- Silently corrected a few typos.
- Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.
- In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WINTER BUTTERFLIES IN BOLINAS ***
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