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All About Monarchs: How to Attract, Raise, & Release Monarch Butterflies

Last Updated on June 2, 2023

Are you ready to experience actual magic in your garden? Few things in nature are as awe-inspiring as the lifecycle of a monarch butterfly. And being able to participate in their journey makes it exponentially more special! Monarch butterflies, like most pollinators and wildlife, are under threat by humans ever-increasing domination and abuse of the natural world. Urban sprawl, monoculture, pesticide use, and habitat destruction are harming our friends. Additionally, monarchs have some natural predators to contend with!

The percentage of monarchs that survive from egg to adulthood is very low. Researchers agree that less than 10% of the eggs that are laid survive to become adult butterflies. Some feel that this number may be significantly under 10%. To account for low survival in the wild, female monarch butterflies can lay 300-500 eggs in their short lifetime.

Monarch Joint Venture


One huge way you can help boost monarch butterfly numbers is to create a butterfly and pollinator-friendly garden! Check out this post about the top 23 plants for pollinators! If you want to take it a step further, you can help protect monarchs by actively shepherding them safely through their journey of metamorphosis. That is what we’ll talk about today.

So you’re interested in raising Monarchs, huh? Excellent!


Read along to learn about attracting monarch butterflies to your garden, how to create a safe space to raise them during their transition from caterpillar to chrysalis to adult butterfly, and eventually – release them!


We’ll also go over the basic life cycle of a monarch, so you’ll know what to expect as you witness it! Potential threats and predators to monarch butterflies that may be present in your yard will be discussed, along with best practices to keep them healthy, fed, and hopefully disease-free in your enclosures. At the very end of the post, make sure to tune in to the video of a monarch emerging from its chrysalis!

I plan to write many more posts about monarch butterflies in the future too, including fun facts, FAQs, troubleshooting, migration patterns, and so on. This post is intended to be a crash-course on “Raising Monarchs 101” to get folks ready for the monarch season, since there has been a huge interest in helping to raise and release them as we do!

Please note…

…we are not claiming to be experts over here! Nor are we perfect in our techniques. But we do try our best. We have done a ton of research, experienced very few losses, and we successfully released over 160 healthy, beautiful butterflies last year! Our garden is also a Certified Monarch Waystation.


All 5 Instar stages of a monarch caterpillars together, on a purple-colored rock with a few milkweed leaves, plus a teeny egg.
The 5 Instar stages of a monarch caterpillar, plus a teeny egg! This crew was a riot to wrangle for a photo! Fourth instar kept crawling on top of 1st instar and the egg, 5th instar kept pooping, and 2nd instar was ready to par-taaay! Clearly.

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The Monarch Butterfly Life Cycle


Range & Populations

Monarch butterflies, or Danaus plexippus, are indigenous to North America. They are commonly found from southern Canada down to South America and the Caribbean. A small population also resides in Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, Spain, and the Pacific Islands!

Within the United States, there are three distinct populations. South Florida has its own non-migratory population of monarch butterflies, while the rest of the U.S. is divided by the Rocky Mountains. West of the Rockies is the “western population” and east of the Rockies is… you guessed it: the “eastern population”. In the fall the eastern population migrates to the cool, high mountains of central Mexico and the western population migrates to coastal California, where they spend the entire winter. Here on the Central Coast, we happen to live just one mile inland from a monarch preserve, where thousands come to overwinter!

Monarch butterflies can be found and raised virtually anywhere in the United States, and the aforementioned locations! That is, anywhere there is milkweed.


Egg to Caterpillar

Adult monarch butterflies lay their eggs on milkweed, and milkweed alone. Only 3 to 5 days later, a teeny tiny monarch caterpillar emerges. It usually eats the now-empty egg casing as its first bit of nutrition!

Next, monarch caterpillars (or as I call them, “cats”) go through 5 distinct stages of growth. These are referred to as their “instar” stages. Between each stage, the caterpillar sheds its skin to jump up to the next size. They’ll usually eat the sloughed skin too! As they grow, the caterpillar spends approximately 1-3 days in each of the 1st instar through 4th instar stages, and a final 3-5 days as a 5th instar. The rate of development and time in each stage is temperature dependent. Warmer conditions speeds things up, and cold slows them down.

During their time as a “cat”, they rapidly eat milkweed. They have to eat nearly non-stop in order to keep up with their incredible growth rate. Monarch caterpillars increase their mass by 2,000 to 3,000 times their “birth weight” in just 9-14 days!

Two images, showing the size difference between a 2nd instar monarch and the 4th and 5th instar. The 2nd instar is so tiny, held on a finger tip, about a quarter inch long and skinny. The larger black, white, and yellow striped 4th and 5th instar caterpillars are in an open hand, but are an inch or two long and very fat.
2nd instar monarch caterpillar versus 4th and 5th instar cats!


Caterpillar to Chrysalis

Once they’re fat, happy, and ready, the 5th instar cats will leave their host milkweed plant in search of a safe place to pupate. Monarch caterpillars can travel over 30 feet away from the milkweed to find the right spot! In a garden, they’ll often choose the underside of picnic tables, planter ledges, windowsills, along with the underside of leaves or in shrubs.  In an enclosure, they usually prefer the top of the container, or sometimes the side. They prefer to find a rough textured surface over a smoother one.

The monarch caterpillar creates a silk pad, spinning and depositing silk with its mouth. It then turns around and attaches its hind end to the silk button, and hangs upside. They curl up slightly, forming a J -shape. Thus, this stage is often referred to as “hanging in J” or simply “in J”.

Two images. One is a monarch caterpillar hanging upside down "in J", by its hind end to a fuzzy leaf. The other image is after it has split its skin and is halfway changed to a chrysalis. It is partially lumpy and long like a caterpillar still, but is bright green like a chrysalis instead of striped black, white and yellow.
“Hanging in J” on the left. On the right, a caterpillar that was in the middle of its transformation between cat and chrysalis. Next to it, a beautifully formed monarch chrysalis.


Within a day or two of hanging in J, they go through one last molt. This can take longer in cold conditions. You’ll know they’re close to shedding and changing when they hang more straight rather than in J. The antennas will also go thin and limp immediately beforehand. Then their skin splits, starting at their head end.

Next, the caterpillar will give you the most trippy, fascinating show you have even seen! Check it out in time lapse below. The emerging pupae will wiggle and pulse and flail around, shrinking down from a lumpy caterpillar into a smooth green chrysalis in the matter of minutes. The skin usually falls away during this dance. It can take a full day or two for the chrysalis to completely harden, so avoid moving or disturbing it until then.

To learn more about moving and hanging a chrysalis when needed, see this post.


Pretty trippy, huh?! If you’re interested in watching a normal, non-time lapse version of the process, check out our YouTube video of this dance up-close and personal!


Chrysalis to Butterfly

Once the chrysalis is formed, their insides turn to bright green goo as they rearrange their entire being and biology from caterpillar to butterfly. Metamorphosis. It’s bananas. Anywhere from 10-20 days later, they’ll emerge as a fresh adult butterfly! The average time a monarch spends in chrysalis is about 2 weeks.

You’ll know when a butterfly is close to emerging (also known as “eclose”) as the chrysalis changes colors. At first, it will be slightly darker green, but you’ll start to make out the wings through the casing. Then it becomes darker, as the monarchs black and orange colors show through even more. On the day they emerge, the chrysalis will be virtually transparent, becoming very thin. The final telltale sign that the butterfly will eclose at any moment is when the top striated portion of the chrysalis starts to expand like an accordion.

Four images showing the change in a monarch butterfly chrysalis over a few days period, right before it emerges as a butterfly. The small thimble-size chrysalis changes from green to darker green, then you can see the black and orange wings showing through, and eventually and chrysalis casing is totally transparent. The butterfly wings are completely visible through it.
These photos were taken over a three day period, in the cool weather of early summer here. The change may happen a little faster in hotter weather, but they will never emerge until the chrysalis is completely transparent as shown in the bottom two images.


When a monarch butterfly emerges from its chrysalis, it hangs upside down from the empty casing, holding on by its feet. They may also climb onto another nearby surface. Its wings are folded up at first, and its body will be engorged with fluid. Don’t let the folded wings scare you! That doesn’t mean it has OE (discussed below). They should straighten out.

Hanging upside down immediately after emerging is absolutely essential for a monarch to live a normal life. If one of yours falls and you see it right away, hang it back up! As the new butterfly hangs, they pump fluid from their body into their wings, slowly filling and expanding them. It takes several hours for them to fully dry and be able to fly.

Three images of a monarch butterfly that has just emerged from its chrysalis. It is hanging upside down, grasping the now empty thin casing with its legs. At first, it is small and crumpled looking. Slowly, the wings straighten and enlarge. The last photo shows it fully expanded and looking like a normal monarch butterfly, with gorgeous black and orange wings and white dots around the body and wing border.
In addition to pumping fluid from its body into its wing, the newly emerged monarch is also working on another important task! Their proboscis, or tongue part, is in two pieces when they emerge! You’ll see them working their mouth parts around it, smoothing it into one joined piece. See the split tongue on the left?!



Life as a Monarch Butterfly

A monarch butterfly’s first day out of chrysalis will usually be spent hanging, and pumping their wings. They may not take their first flight until the following day. Freshly emerged butterflies don’t need nectar to drink for the first 24 hours. Once they’re fully dry, I place our monarchs out on a favorite nectar flower, like verbena or zinnia. And then, they’re off!

Did you know that the lifespan of an adult monarch butterfly is only 2 to 6 weeks? The females spend their short, beautiful little life laying as many eggs as possible. The males spend their time patrolling their “territory” for females, and will often chase off other male butterflies and even hummingbirds from their garden of choice – ours included!

One special type of monarch does live much longer however! The fourth generation of monarch butterflies that are “born” during the fall each year are called Super Monarchs. They’re the ones that are destined to migrate up to 3,000 miles in the winter, and can live up to 6 months! Super monarchs spend the winter in warmer southern regions, and return (at least part way) to northern climates in spring, in search of mates and milkweed to lay eggs on.

Then the cycle repeats itself. And oh, what a magical cycle it is!


An image of a male and female monarch, side by side. They look very similar, with orange and black wings with white dots around the edges. However, the male has two distinct black dots on its lower wings that are absent in the female. The female also has more and larger white dots around the perimeter of her wings, and thicker black veins.
Now you can tell the difference between male and female monarchs! Aside from the males extra black dots on their wings, the females usually have more and larger white dots around the perimeter of their wings. If you go back up to the photo of the butterfly that was freshly emerged from the chrysalis, you can also tell that is a male by looking at the underside of the wings. The black dots make a noticeable dimple.


How to Attract & Find Monarchs In Your Garden

Milkweed

The single best way is to attract monarch butterflies to your garden is to plant milkweed. Where there is milkweed, there will be monarchs! This is because milkweed is the one and only food source for monarch caterpillars. It is their “host plant”. Therefore, this is where the adult female monarch butterflies will lay their eggs – so their babies will have immediate access to food. Ensure the milkweed you buy has not been treated with pesticides. Ask the nursery and distributor.

Depending on where you live, monarchs may start to show up in your area in search of milkweed between March and July each year, as they return from their overwintering in Mexico or California. The Florida population does not migrate.

Once milkweed is planted in your yard, all you have to do is wait and watch. If you start to see monarch butterflies visit your yard, you should also notice the females laying eggs on it. They’ll tap their torso to the underside of the leaves, depositing eggs. You can collect leaves with eggs on them and start the rearing process very early. Alternately, you could wait until they have hatched and collect caterpillars which is what we prefer to do. Remember, check the undersides of leaves for the little caterpillars!

No, we don’t buy our monarch eggs or cats online. However, I have heard of such a thing – for classroom lessons, for example! You could give it a go if you’d like to, but please ensure they’re normally present in your area, and that you are prepared with everything they need. Otherwise, see if you can entice them to come naturally!

Types of Milkweed

There are over 100 species of milkweed (Asclepias) with a huge diversity in foliage, flower color, size and appearance. Despite the wide variety, all types of milkweed are host plants for monarchs! It is best practice to grow milkweed that is native to your area, which will be most suited for your climate. Check out this article by Monarch Butterfly Garden to find which types of milkweed are native to your region. Also, check with your local nurseries!

When you buy started plants, be sure to ask the nursery or grower about their pesticide use. You do not want to bring home milkweed that has been sprayed!

Tropical milkweed is a popular option because the monarchs love it, and it is fast and easy to grow. However, tropical milkweed do not die back in winter as other native species do, which can lead to a disruption in the monarchs natural migration pattern. If you choose to grow tropical milkweed, ensure you cut it back for the winter to about 6” and remove foliage. Do this no later than Thanksgiving in California and southern states, and by late October in northern States. Cutting back milkweed also helps prevent the spread of OE, a parasite that inflicts monarchs. This practice doesn’t apply to southern Florida, where a non-migratory population of monarchs resides – though planting native milkweed is still encouraged!


Other Nectar Sources for Monarchs

Adult monarch butterflies will sip on nectar from milkweed plants too, but have much wider options for food than their larval form. Monarch butterflies enjoy the nectar from flowers like verbena, zinnias, coneflower, blazing meadow star, agastache, Mexican sunflower, butterfly bush, and more! Read more about the top 23 favorite pollinator plants here.

A monarch butterfly sitting in the sun on a purple lollipop verbena, surrounded by other flowering plants like purple sage, yellow yarrow, and lavender.
Lollipop verbena is a monarch favorite in our garden!

If you plant these types of flowers along with milkweed, and avoid the use of pesticide sprays in your yard, you’re giving monarchs a stellar helping hand! However, if you intend to take it a step further and bring in monarchs found in your yard to raise them, you need to plan in advance! This includes gathering some basic supplies, and a stockpile of milkweed



Everything You Need to Know About Raising Monarch Butterflies

As beautiful and fairly straightforward the process of taking monarchs into captivity may appear, it isn’t quite as simple as you may imagine. If we are essentially intervening in their natural process, we want to ensure more benefit is created than harm being caused! I know we all have good intentions, but there are definitely some best practices to be aware of, as well as some no-no’s to avoid.

Let’s get prepared.


Supplies You’ll Need to Raise Monarchs


Here is a brief list of all the supplies you’ll find useful to responsibly raise monarchs:

  • A steady supply of milkweed. A lot of it!
  • An enclosure. It is recommended to have a few different “housing” options for caterpillars and butterflies at different stages of life.
  • Stem vases or floral tubes for milkweed cuttings.
  • Diluted bleach spray for sanitizing.
  • Hand vacuum for “frass” aka caterpillar poop (optional, but handy)
  • A monarch journal, for keeping track of new butterflies as well as documenting issues


Now let’s talk about all of this in more detail.


Milkweed, Milkweed, Milkweed!


The first and most important step in your monarch-rearing journey is having a steady, ample supply of milkweed ready and waiting.

Plan to have several large established milkweed plants in your garden, or dozens of potted plants, ready and available well before you start considering taking in monarchs. You know the children’s book “The Hungry Hungry Caterpillar?” They didn’t get that idea from nowhere. Those monarch cats can EAT! A lot.

If you don’t have an ample supply ready, you’ll be faced with the awful situation of running out of food for your babies. Despite having dozens of milkweed plants in our garden, I can’t tell you how many special trips I made to our local nursery for more milkweed last summer. Fortunately, our local nursery always carries milkweed plants and is committed to sourcing them from growers who do not spray or otherwise treat with pesticides. Do not trust a label just because it says “pollinator friendly”. ASK! Contact the grower directly, not only the seller.

I hate to say it, but a couple small plants just won’t cut it. That is, unless you only plan to bring in and raise a few monarch cats. I urge you to only bring in an amount you can manage and responsibly raise. Don’t go collecting every baby caterpillar you can find! If you don’t have quick access to a local nursery and only have a couple small milkweed plants on hand, you may not be adequately prepared for this season.

Two close up images of large black, white, and yellow striped monarch caterpillars eating milkweed leaves.
Hungry, hungry… ridiculously hungry caterpillars.


Why bring monarch caterpillars into an enclosure?

Why don’t you just leave them out in the garden, you ask? Well, that is certainly what some folks opt to do, letting nature take its course. On the other hand, some gardeners see that the monarch caterpillar population in their yard is struggling and in need of help! That is the situation we were in. After seeing monarch cat after monarch cat succumb to a sad death, or mysteriously disappear, we knew we wanted to step in to protect them from predators. We’ll talk more about monarch predators in just a moment.

In addition to providing them a safe, predator-proof space to thrive, rearing monarchs is a very fun, fascinating, and rewarding experience! This is especially true for kiddos. It provides for an excellent, hands-on, up-close opportunity for them to learn about the life cycle of monarch butterflies.

However, keep in mind that death is also a part of any natural life cycle – including premature death. Things may not always be pretty and picture-perfect in your monarch rearing efforts, so do be prepared for a few sad moments. A “good” survival rate for caterpillars raised in captivity is about 80-90%. If you’re losing more than 10-20%, something may be wrong. Hopefully by the time you’ve finished reading this article, you’ll have a better idea of how to prevent such issues.


Monarch Predators

Fortunately, the list of predators to monarchs is fairly small. Milkweed is toxic and bitter to pretty much all other species, humans included. By consuming it, monarch caterpillars become very bitter and distasteful too. Thus, birds (who usually love all sorts of caterpillars and worms!) typically do not eat monarch caterpillars.

However, lizards, toads, ants, predatory stink bugs, and some spiders will eat them. Mice may eat chrysalids too. The two more prevalent predators we battle here are wasps and tachinid flies. They are what drove us to start raising monarchs. Another very common threat to monarchs is a parasite called OE, short for Ophryocystis elektroscirrha.

Wasp damage is fairly obvious and straightforward. You will either observe the wasp on the caterpillar, actively eating it, or see the remnants of a half-eaten, collapsed, gooey caterpillar. Other times, your cats may simply seem to vanish from the milkweed plant as if it was taken by a larger predator.


Tachinid Flies

The harm caused by tachinid flies is far less obvious, until it is too late. These small red-eyed flies lay their eggs on monarch caterpillars, and the tachinid larvae that emerge are parasites. Tachinid fly larvae burrow into the monarch caterpillar, and feed on it from the inside out. They’re known to eat non-essential tissues first, so the caterpillar will often live for quite a while despite its parasitic infection within. Tachinid flies generally go after larger caterpillars and the chrysalis itself.

Telltale signs of a tachinid fly larvae infection include:

  • The monarch caterpillar gets skinnier with time.
  • The caterpillar may attempt to pupate (hang upside in “J” and turn into a chrysalis) early, or when it appears too small to do so.
  • Parasitized caterpillars will often die while attempting to form their chrysalis
  • If they do make it into a chrysalis, it will become discolored, turning orange and then brown.
  • Eventually, the tachinid fly larvae emerge from the infected caterpillar or chrysalis as little white maggots. When they do this, they leave behind white strands that will dangle from the caterpillar or chrysalis from which they emerged.
  • Fallen from the caterpillar, you may be able to either find the tachinid maggots themselves, or their freshly-formed pupae – a reddish brown nugget that is about the size of a small mouse poop – which is what they change into before emerging as a new fly.


If it becomes obvious that tachinid flies are an issue in your area, experts say you can help by taking in monarch caterpillars as eggs or very small caterpillars (1st, 2nd, and 3rd instar). If you wait and take in only the largest caterpillars (4th and 5th instar), there is chance they may already be parasitized.

An image of a monarch caterpillar that was attempting to hang upside down from the inside of a screened monarch habitat, but died from tachinid fly infestation. The caterpillar is hanging limp, shrunken, and has a hole pierced in its side, with goo and white strands hanging down. A smaller image within the image shows a hand holding a small brown-red capsule, the size of mouse poop. This is the tachinid fly larvae that emerged from within and killed the caterpillar.
Death from a tachinid fly larvae. It emerged from the caterpillar that was attempting to pupate. I was able to locate the tachinid larvae casing in the bottom of the enclosure, and smash the hell out of it.


What is OE?

“Ophryocystis elektroscirrha (OE) is a debilitating protozoan parasite that infects monarchs. Infected adult monarchs harbor thousands or millions of microscopic OE spores on the outside of their bodies. When dormant spores are scattered onto eggs or milkweed leaves by infected adults, monarch larvae consume the spores, and these parasites then replicate inside the larvae and pupae. Monarchs with severe OE infections can fail to emerge successfully from their pupal stage, either because they become stuck or they are too weak to fully expand their wings. Monarchs with mild OE infections can appear normal but live shorter lives and cannot fly as well as healthy monarchs.”

Monarch Joint Venture


OE is very common among the Florida population of monarchs, moderately common in the Western United States, and less common in the Midwest. We have been very lucky and haven’t struggled with obvious signs of OE here on our homestead.

If a monarch butterfly emerges from its chrysalis with severely deformed, crumpled wings, the cause is most likely OE. They may be weak and fall from the chrysalis casing, unable to hang to dry as needed. When this happens, or when you have any other obvious sign of disease in a butterfly or caterpillar it is important that they’re removed from the enclosure, and everything is thoroughly sanitized as quickly as possible. We’ll talk more about sanitizing methods below.

The most humane way to euthanize a sick or suffering butterfly or caterpillar is by freezing it. They will go dormant, and then freeze. Some folks prefer a more quick death, squeezing the inflicted insect in a paper towel. I can’t bring myself to do this.

However, not all monarch butterflies that carry OE will show obvious signs. When they emerge, they may appear fairly normal. Carrier butterflies will still slough off OE spores from their wings. Because of this, experts suggest that chrysalids should be kept in a different enclosure from the rest of the caterpillar population. That way, if the freshly emerged butterflies are shedding OE spores, the entire colony is not infected. We do our best to keep the majority of our caterpillars separate from our chrysalids, though I’ll admit a tiny bit of mixing does go on, as we’ll discuss next.


Monarch Enclosures: Options, Upkeep, & Best Practices


Different Cages for Different Ages

Did you know that larger monarch caterpillars can (and do) eat smaller monarch caterpillars and eggs? Yep. I don’t think it’s intentional though. The issue is, the big cats have a big appetite! As they gobble up their milkweed, they’ll also gobble up anything that is on the leaf – including other little monarch cats or eggs. Therefore, it is best practice to keep the smallest caterpillars in a separate enclosure than the larger ones.

Keeping them separated by their stage in development helps prevent anyone from accidentally eating one another. Additionally, this helps prevent the spread of disease, as we discussed previously in the OE section above. We have three different enclosures for various stages; two for separating caterpillars by size, and one for chrysalis and emerging butterflies.

One way to accomplish this is to carefully, physically relocate the chrysalis that have formed in one enclosure into another enclosure where they’ll emerge into butterflies. We do this quite often. Check out this article to see how! To reduce the number that we have to relocate, we also move some of the biggest cats into the chrysalis enclosure right before they actually transform. We’ll discuss this momentarily.

There are many options for monarch rearing enclosures, including mesh tents, aquariums, DIY cages, converted screen reptile cages, or even food storage containers!


Using plastic containers or jars

Because they’re so tiny at first, many people keep their smallest caterpillars and eggs in containers like glass jars, plastic food storage containers, or similar. The container must be breathable, so use mesh/screen lids or add air holes – but not so large they’ll escape!

Milkweed cuttings are placed inside, often times in floral tubes to maintain freshness. We’ll talk more about milkweed cuttings later! On the other hand, some folks simply lay milkweed leaves and stems in the container on top of a lightly damp paper towel. New leaves are added as frequently as needed to keep them fresh – once per day or even more often.

The humidity inside smaller enclosed containers must be carefully monitored. The goal is to have just enough humidity to keep the milkweed fresh, but not so much that their poop (called “frass”) develops mold. To maintain sanitary living conditions, clean out their container to remove the frass often.

An image of a large glass jar, maybe a gallon in size. It has a screen net with rubber band over the top, and a smaller jar with milkweed branch cuttings inside to feed the caterpillars.
An example of a small clean, breathable monarch enclosure. Note that it is best practice to raise them outdoors. Photo from Prairie Haven


Mesh butterfly tents

You could also use mesh tents as an enclosure to raise monarch caterpillars. This is what we use, in addition to our larger homemade wood-framed screen cage. We have two of these mesh tents! They come in small, medium, and large sizes, each rated for a certain caterpillar population capacity and size of plants.

One of our tents is the designated “baby tent” where the smallest monarch caterpillars are housed – 1st through 2nd or 3rd instar.  Another tent is designated for “teenagers” – 4th and 5th instar. Inside, we keep potted milkweed plants. They are rotated out periodically to maintain freshness and prevent the spread of disease. When needed, we also use cuttings.

Important safety note about using butterfly tents: The caterpillars seem very drawn to hanging out on the zipper portion, or even hanging “in J” and forming their chrysalis there. Therefore, it is important that you check the zipper area very carefully (by looking through from the other side) and unzip your tents slowly! I will admit, I caught a cat in the zipper once. It was so traumatic that I will never, ever do that again.

Two images of a mesh style butterfly tent. One shows a potted milkweed plant inside the tent, with many striped monarch caterpillars all over it, plus some crawling on the inner walls of the tent. The second image shows a chrysalis formed right near the zipper.
Our teenager tent. Of course they like to hang out by the zipper! Let’s keep life interesting! Why not? Yes, I relocated that guy as soon as he hardened.


Our Big Butterfly Enclosure

Our DIY wood-framed enclosure is used primarily for chrysalides and emerging butterflies. Once the largest 5th instar cats in the “teenager tent” start to wander away from their milkweed and explore the top of the cage – a sign they’re looking for a spot to hang and pupate soon – we relocate them into the wood “adult” enclosure. Sometimes, they trick us and aren’t quite ready to change yet! So we do leave a potted milkweed plant (or cuttings) in this enclosure for them to grab their last meal from as needed, and rotate it out frequently.

The cats that we move into this cage usually choose to form their chrysalis on the top ceiling of the enclosure. For the chrysalides we physically relocate from the teenager tent, we included a couple of secure, rough-textured branches that we can easily tie the chrysalis to with waxed floss.


Specs

Unfortunately, I don’t have “plans” of the enclosure we built, but I can try my best to describe its stats for you! The cage portion is 15 inches deep, 36 inches tall, and 27 inches wide. It has a separate base/stand that it sits on, that we also built to the same depth and width, but is about a foot shorter. This makes it easy to move about or store away in the off season if needed.

We choose these dimensions to suit the space we knew we wanted to keep the enclosure. It is wide and deep enough to fit a couple potted plants in. It is definitely taller than necessary. Monarch butterflies only need about 4 to 6 inches of space below their chrysalis to safely emerge, hang, and dry. I simply wanted it nice and tall so it would be at a comfortable level for working in, and observing them.

Take a look at the photos to get a better idea of how we constructed it. The simple wood frame was made with redwood 2x2s. A fine mesh insect screen was added to line the inside of the cage frame, creating one smooth continuous screen all the way around. This helped to eliminate extra nooks and crannies they could try to squeeze into, or hang from. The bottom is plywood, covered with inexpensive sheet vinyl for easy cleaning. The hinged door shuts tightly with an eye and hook latch. Also, it has a lining of thick weather stripping between the door and frame to prevent any gaps.

Four images of a wood-frame monarch butterfly enclosure. The wood frame is made with small redwood 2x2 boards. The cage is screened, and is 15 inches deep, 36 inches tall, and 27 inches wide. It has a separate base/stand that it sits on, that we also built to the same depth and width, but is about a foot shorter.
Close up details of the same wood cage shown above, showing the weather stripping around the door, the eye and hook latch, the base without the cage on it, and a close up of the inside screen, flush in the corners.
Our DIY monarch eclose enclosure… Eclosure? Hopefully these images plus the description above give you handy people a good enough idea of how to make something similar! We have been toying with the idea of modifying this bad boy into two levels, to house more stages but separately – since it is plenty tall!



Transferring caterpillars between cages

It is best practice to avoid moving caterpillars into various cages continuously, to avoid the spread of potential disease. To be honest, we aren’t 100% perfect here, but we do try our best!

Here are a few example scenarios of what we may do. I may collect a bunch of tiny 1st and 2nd instars all at once, and put them in a tent or smaller container. I also may find a bunch of 3rd, 4th and 5th instars during that hunt, and put them together in another tent. Being that each group was around the same stage in development when collected, they can all theoretically live together in their respective tents up until they get moved to the wood enclosure.

As much as possible, I try to move them through the cages in groups, and do a deep cleaning and sanitizing between groups – discussed more at the end of this post. And of course, changing out the milkweed. Though, the timing isn’t always perfect.  They don’t always mature at exactly the same rate. And I am always tempted to take in more…. So sometimes, I do move individuals between cages as needed.

The good news is, we have experienced very little signs of monarch disease in our garden, with the exception of tachinid flies – which isn’t contagious among members in an enclosure.


Temperature & Climate

Keep your outdoor enclosure somewhere that is protected from strong wind or rain. It is best if it receives nice bright ambient light for potted plants, but is protected from the hottest afternoon sun for the cats. In very hot summer climates, it may be best to locate your enclosures in full shade. Ours receive morning to midday sun. We have a piece of shade cloth readily available to drape over the cage for hotter-than-average mornings.

Monarchs of all stages may die if exposed to temperatures over 95°F. Temperatures rarely get that hot here, but during a freak heat wave last summer we did bring our cat enclosures inside for a couple days. I was likely being a bit overprotective, since they survive Florida and Texas summers, but that temperature threshold is still worth noting!

A lot of people who raise monarch butterflies do so in enclosures indoors. However, recent studies are showing that indoor-reared monarchs may not be able to properly navigate and migrate. Therefore, it is best practice to keep them outdoors as much as possible.

Cool temperatures also affect monarchs. They will die if they’re exposed to freezing conditions, but most of them have migrated on to warmer places during the time of year this would be a concern. Monarchs go virtually dormant in temperatures less than 55°F. They are less active in cooler conditions, meaning they’ll eat less, grow slower, and take longer to transform between stages.

For example, we have had a monarch caterpillar hang “in J” (waiting to transform into a chrysalis) for nearly two weeks during cool spring weather. On the other hand, it can take as little as two days to hang and pupate into a chrysalis in the late summer! Similarly, our very first monarch “Tilly” spent a full month in chrysalis before emerging as a butterfly, while the average summer monarch will emerge from its chrysalis in only 10-14 days.


Ways to provide milkweed for monarch caterpillars: potted plants or cuttings

Inside each enclosure, a supply of fresh milkweed must always be provided for the hungry, growing monarch cats. For baby containers with little caterpillars, many people simply pluck off fresh leaves from an available milkweed plant, adding them to the container once or twice per day. For larger enclosures, it may be possible to place potted milkweed plants inside.

The milkweed plants in our yard are still fairly young. Meaning, we can’t afford to take clippings from on a regular basis without decimating them. Therefore, we primarily use potted milkweed plants in our monarch enclosures. Yes, we have dozens! However, if you are fortunate to live somewhere with access to large, wild, abundant milkweed plants, taking cuttings may be the way to go! We are slowly transitioning to using more and more cuttings, as it is the suggested best practice for sanitation.

An image of large milkweed leaves stuck inside small 3 inch plastic floral tubes, sitting in a rack that hold them all up.
Image courtesy of Monarch Butterfly Garden

How to take milkweed cuttings

I recently learned a great tip for keeping milkweed cutting fresh and spry! In the past, the cuttings we did take went limp very fast, even when stored in water. The cats were not happy with this sub-par food. It turns out that when a milkweed stem is first cut, the latex substance that it oozes clogs up the wound –  and doesn’t allow water to be taken up! So the trick to keep milkweed cuttings fresh is this: cut the stem twice, and run it under warm water, then put it in water.

Place milkweed cuttings in water, in a container with a narrow opening. For example, a glass jar is not ideal, unless it has a lid and you insert it through a straw hole or something. We don’t want the caterpillars to accidentally get into the container and drown! This is where floral tubes come in handy! Most serious monarch enthusiasts use floral tubes like these to keep milkweed cuttings fresh, and caterpillars safe. Easy-to-clean racks can hold the tubes upright. Apparently this is so common, that when I was searching for floral tubes to buy recently, they are listed on Amazon as “floral tubes and racks for milkweed cuttings”. Ha! We got this rack with extra-large 60 ml tubes to try out this season.

Another option is to place cuttings in a narrow-neck bottle and tightly wrap the opening with a cloth or paper towel, preventing caterpillar access.


Monarch Enclosure Maintenance & Sanitation

Frass Removal

What goes in, must come out…. You know how I said monarch caterpillars eat a lot? Well, that means they also poop a lot. They’re pretty much like chickens! Caterpillar poop is called frass. The good news is, frass isn’t nearly as nasty as chicken poop. It doesn’t smell at all! However, it can get moldy and start to harbor bacteria with time. The goal is to keep the caterpillar enclosures as sanitary as possible, meaning routine cleaning is needed. We try to remove built up frass every couple of days in our baby tent (they poop less) and nearly every day in the teenager or adult enclosure.

One potentially easy way to remove frass from their cage is to pull out the contents (potted plants, cuttings, caterpillars, paper towels, etc) and gently shake the frass out of the now-empty container. This is easy for tiny containers like those used for smaller cats. This is also a feasible option for mesh tents, if all the cats are hanging out on the milkweed. However, if they’re crawling all of the enclosure, that method could get a bit tricky.  

A method I read about on a monarch caterpillar forum that we have adopted is using a small hand vacuum! It makes daily cleaning of cat poop very quick and easy! You know I mean caterpillar poop by now, right? Ok good. Obviously, care still needs to be taken to avoid sucking up any babies, and the vacuum also needs to be sanitized routinely.

One last solution I just stumbled upon is using an inexpensive plastic pot saucer tray under the milkweed pot or cuttings. See the image below. This would still need to be removed and sanitized periodically, but would help keep the bottom of your enclosure much more clean!

A small zip-up mesh butterfly tent, with a plastic pot saucer sitting inside. The saucer is labelled "poo poo platter"
Image courtesy of Monarch Butterfly Shop

Sanitizing monarch enclosures

In addition to frequent routine clean-ups, you’ll also need to perform a deeper sanitizing of their enclosures and supplies (e.g. floral tubes) on occasion. I haven’t read any hard fast rules about sanitizing frequencies, but here is how we approach it: I try to do a deeper sanitizing every weekend, or more often if needed. The “if needed” would be if I saw any sign of disease from a caterpillar or emerged butterfly. In that instance, I remove the milkweed plant to be kept in quarantine until next season, and replace it with a fresh one after the entire enclosure has been sanitized.


How to sanitize

Warning all hippies, cover your ears! I am about to use the “B” word. To sanitize monarch enclosures, every expert resource suggests to use bleach. So that is what we use. While we try to avoid chlorine bleach as much as possible, we don’t want to mess around when it comes to our monarch’s health!

It is my understanding that bleach is the best solution for killing things like OE spores or other harmful bacteria. Some serious monarch enthusiasts even soak their milkweed cuttings in a dilute bleach solution and then rinse it off with tap water before feeding it to their cats! Sure, sometimes straight undiluted vinegar can be quite effective at disinfecting things, but the issue is also contact time. Vinegar required nearly 20 minutes of contact time to work. Bleach works in 30 seconds. When we are literally juggling dozens of wriggling wild cats, time is of the essence.

To sanitize our monarch mesh tents, we pull everything out and spray it down thoroughly using a spray bottle with about 5% diluted bleach solution – or one part bleach to 19 parts water. Let it sit for for at least 30 seconds, up to a couple minutes, and then rinse with fresh water. For the chrysalis enclosure, I obviously don’t take them all out. I do my best to carefully spray the floor area and screen side walls below them, avoiding misting them.


An image of a hand holding a female monarch butterfly in front of a monarch rearing enclosure in the background, which is full of dozens of green chrysalids and monarch caterpillars hanging in J.
A glimpse inside our butterfly enclosure on a very busy summer day! Look at all those J-ing cats and chrysalids! Since this enclosure is pretty much always occupied by those on top, I try to carefully clean and sanitize around them – including the cage walls and floor.


Releasing Monarchs – Eclose Day

So, we’ve made it this far! You’ve gathered your milkweed, created a clean and safe haven to raise monarch caterpillars, and have seen them through their transformation from caterpillar to chrysalis.

And now, for the moment we’ve all been waiting for – they’re about to emerge as butterflies! Congratulations!


Come check out our YouTube Channel here! We also have a video of a monarch caterpillar pupating into a chrysalis!


Supposedly, it is most common for monarch butterflies to eclose from their chrysalis in the morning. However, we have experienced them emerge during all hours of the day! But never overnight. Remember, once they emerge, it is essential for them to have space to hang upside down. It will take several hours for them to dry and be ready to fly.

If the weather is not ideal on release day (for example, it’s pouring rain, extremely windy or hot, and so on), it is okay to keep them in the enclosure for a bit longer as needed. Freshly emerged adult monarch butterflies do not need to drink nectar for the first 24 hours. If it is going to be longer than that, you have a few options aside from flowers! Supplemental treats that can provide monarch butterflies essential sugar include orange slices, watermelon, or ripe, wet, smushed banana pieces.

Fun fact: Monarch butterflies taste with their feet!

When the time is right, bring your precious baby butterflies out onto a nectar flower of choice. If they’re really dry and ready to go, they might just fly off! So take care in gently cupping your hands around them if you are transferring from indoors to outdoors. When you set them out, they may still want to hang upside down, so I always place them in that position.


And now, they are free! It is so bittersweet…


A hand holding a male monarch butterfly in front a garden space, ready to be released. The garden has many raised beds, a lot of flowers, green/blue gravel between the beds, and stone pathways. A small blue house is in the distance, lit up with outdoor string lights. Sun is hitting the butterfly and illuminating it.
“Everything the light touches, is your kingdom…”
This was our last monarch of the 2018 season, number 160. A boy.


What do you think? Are you ready to help raise and release monarch butterflies this season? Or, maybe you need another year to prepare? Either way, I hope you have found this article informative, helpful, and exciting. Raising monarch butterflies is seriously one of my favorite things to experience in the garden! I love them SO much! Hopefully, you will get to experience it too.


If you liked this article, I bet you’d also be interested in supporting all types of wildlife in your garden! Our property is a Certified Wildlife Habitat, and gardens of all shapes and sizes can do the same. Check out this article to learn how to transform your yard into a more sustainable, equitable, wildlife-friendly place.

Share this post to help spread the monarch love! Pin it below. Also, please feel free to ask questions! Thank you you for your interest in helping monarch butterflies.



Deanna Talerico (aka DeannaCat) is a garden educator and writer with over 15 years experience in organic gardening. She is a retired Senior Environmental Health Specialist, and holds a M.A. in Environmental Studies and B.S. in Sustainability and Natural Resources.

123 Comments

  • Jennifer

    Your page is so well done! I have raised these beauties for 3 years now and I enjoy it so much. I’ve started working with local nursing homes and provide them with chrysalids so that they can share in the miracle. It has brought so much joy to me!

  • Dawn

    Hi, I just found your website. So helpful and I wish I had found it earlier! I only have one chrysalis. Hoping it’s Healthy and makes it. It is hanging on the milkweed plant. Also, there is a little black thread coming out of the chrysalis. The caterpillar head it shed is dangling from it. Should I clip it off? I’m very worried about this.
    Thank you for any advice

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Dawn, if the black string is coming directly out of the bottom of the chrysalis, it likely was tachinid larvae that were inside the chrysalis that emerged from the chrysalis. If that is the case, unfortunately, the chrysalis is no longer alive. Sometimes parts of the skin get stuck on the chrysalis after in transforms which isn’t anything to worry about, however, anything coming directly out of the chrysalis is not a good sign. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Erin

    Good morning! This is my second year raising monarchs, and your article is one of the best I’ve come across. Thank you! My second butterfly of this year just came out a few hours ago, and I’m struggling with whether to release her today or wait until tomorrow. Weather conditions for the rest of the day will be sunny, 65, with sustained 17 mph winds. Temperatures tomorrow will be similar, but it will be somewhat cloudy with virtually no wind. What would you do?

    Thanks!
    Erin

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Erin, once the butterfly is full dry, I would release them as they should be able to handle the slightly windy conditions. Good luck!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Megan, I would look into native milkweed seeds for where you are located and try and stick to those. There may only be a few to choose from depending on where you are, check out this seed finder where you can search by state what milkweed seeds are native and available. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Jamie Lynn

    Thank you for sharing all of this info. I am growing butterfly weed for the first time this year and I was so excited the other day to see a monarch caterpillar munching away. But now I haven’t seen it since. I plan on getting more milkweed/butterfly weed planted next year and I may do what you are doing to keep them safe.

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Jamie, we don’t collect the caterpillars any longer as it is not allowed in California anymore. Now we just have a lot of milkweed planted throughout our property and try and give them the best chance possible by having enough food for the caterpillars as well as other flowers with nectar for the butterflies.

    • Monica Tsoras

      I appreciated your monarch butterfly article!
      I’m working on my 2nd year with this and many of my questions were addressed. Thanks

  • Lucy

    Hello! I just wanted to tell you that I read your article on monarch butterflies and just couldn’t believe how informative it is. I just happened to stumble across it as I was out on our property looking for cats. Our goal is to help (do our small part) in the restoration of the endangered monarch population and with your detailed guidance, I feel like we can make this happen. I was bummed not to find any cats this year on any of our wild milkweed. Now with more knowledge, we’ll keep looking!
    Thank you so much for sharing!

  • Barbara Ferguson

    This is my 3rd summer raising and releasing monarch’s. I am struggling with aphids on my milkweed this season. I blast them off with the hose after carefully checking for baby cats. But they are quickly covered again a day or two later. Any suggestions? Will they bother the eggs or cats? Thanks for your help.

  • Suzan

    Hi! I run a Garden program at an elementary school and I have to say, your articles are so informative and a joy to read! I’ve read many articles on Monarch butterflies but rarely come across one that is as detailed and reader friendly as yours. I’m hoping to learn more from your other articles!
    Thank you.

  • Larry

    Hi Mr. DEANNACAT,

    Just found your site and find it very informative.

    Under “How To Take Milkweed Cuttings”, can you be more specific on cutting twice. I trying to visualize exactly what you mean and HOW TO DO IT.

    Respectfully,
    Larry

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hello Larry, cutting twice just means to cut off a branch of the milkweed from the main plant and then cut that branch again just an inch or so above your original cut. Hope that helps and good luck!

      • Larry

        Thanks for that clarification which is what I assumed, but wanted to be sure. I also grow Swamp Milkweed and will perform the same procedure on their cuttings.
        respectfully,

        Larry

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