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PRAIRIE CENTER TO HOLD ARCHERY
AWARENESS DAY SEPT. 24
Posted: 14
Sep 2011 01:05 PM PDT Sept. 15, 2011 The range is free for public use
and open from dawn to dusk seven days a week. It was
developed to provide shooting opportunities for youth and their
families, and to provide a practice range for local hunters. The range boasts an Range staff will be available to
provide the public with archery equipment and to answer questions. Those who
are interested but can't make it to this event are
encouraged to come out as time permits and use this free outdoor range. For more information, phone the |
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Posted: 14
Sep 2011 01:01 PM PDT Sept. 15, 2011 Amazingly, several generations
separate the southward-migrating monarchs from those that flew north the
previous spring, so they do not have elders to guide them on this 1,000- to
3,000-mile journey. The monarchs that live north of As the migrating monarchs progress
south, local monarchs join them, making the group larger. The observed peak
for the Don't expect to see such gatherings in the same place every
year. Monarch movement is strongly affected by
prevailing weather patterns, so their migration routes vary annually. A good
way to attract monarchs and help them refuel on their fall migration is to
plant September-blooming plants around home. Asters, sunflowers, goldenrod,
and sedum provide blossoms with nectar monarchs need. The right habitat nearby may even
attract overnight roosts of monarchs. They cease flying in the evening and
look for sheltered sites in trees to cluster together for the night. These
sites often have an easterly exposure, so the monarchs can warm up quickly in
the morning sun and resume migration. Such overnight roosts are, in
miniature, just like what may be seen at their
over-wintering site in Monarchs head back north again in
March, but they are seldom the same ones that went south the previous
September. It is the first generation of their descendants, and they begin
arriving around the second week of April. Nor are those that begin the
migration the same butterflies that complete the spring migration. Spring
migrating monarchs may only fly a few hundred miles, then lay eggs and die.
These eggs hatch into caterpillars, pupate, complete metamorphosis into
butterflies, and continue the migration. Thus, the spring migration is often
a leapfrog of generations moving as far north as Because the spring flight north is a dispersal with the purpose of laying eggs on newly
emerging milkweed rather than the mass retreat from winter that occurs in the
fall, large numbers of monarchs are not seen in spring. For more information on monarch butterflies, including where to
look for monarchs and their amazing migration, contact the Monarch Watch program at the |