I had my first successful chrysalis of the season this week!! I’m so far behind this year. Furthermore, I had heaps of caterpillars, but I lost many within 24hrs due to my next-door neighbour who booked in the spider proofing man round to her house!! Chemicals were sprayed a few metres from all of my swan plants in one of the windiest North West Canterbury spring days!!

Luckily I witnessed the truck driving past my house otherwise I would have been wondering what I did wrong and why they got sick. Just shows you, no matter how many plants you grow spray-free from seed and take care of your caterpillars, outside influences kill beyond our control. Some people would have been quick to call their garden centre and blame their new purchase plants that had been sprayed prior that could have killed their caterpillars. Washing my plants every day didn’t remove the poisonous chemicals. It took me over two weeks to water blast my Swan plants/milkweed!! Finally, this week I bleached all my plants that have been eaten and existing plants that suffered the chemicals ready for the next batch of eggs to be laid.  Hopefully, this will do the trick and I will have a more successful summer-like in previous years.  Fingers crossed. My caterpillars are looking much healthier again, they are eating swan plants that were protected from the sprays in my greenhouse, luckily I have heaps!

 The list below is ideal steps to follow when raising monarch caterpillars.

  • Rinse off your swan plants before serving them to your caterpillars.
  • Don’t let butterflies emerge from their chrysalises above feeding caterpillars.
  • Regularly clean out poop and caterpillar corpses.
  • Disinfect your swan plants at the end of each batch, wiping the leaves down with a bleach solution (95% water and 5% bleach). This helps to get rid of spores.
  • Rather than having the disease wipe out every plant and caterpillar, keep your swan plants in several areas of your garden, which will help containment if you suspect disease.

Want to know more about taking care of vital pollinators and would like to purchase my book that has all you need to know about creating a beautiful butterfly garden and raising healthy monarch butterflies, go purchase my excellent resource book.

https://www.amazon.com/Educational-Guide-Monarch-Butterflies/

3 thoughts on “Healthy Caterpillars and Swan Plants

  1. This is brilliant work that you’re doing. Sad about the neighbours chemicals though it shows how detrimental chemicals can be.
    So a great cause butterfly musketeers keep shining butterfly xx

  2. Sad about the neighbours chemicals though it shows how detrimental chemicals can be.
    So a great cause butterfly musketeers keep. This is brilliant work that you’re shining butterfly xx

  3. After having no monarchs for years due to paper wasps when I saw one this year I raised the babies inside. All went well until they are all of my plant and I bought some little dnd of lines ones which were all I could find at Mutre 10. I washed them really well but the two caterpillars that I had on that jar got poisoned. I guess they must have been sprayed as it it the only thing that changed. I had planted the other small plants around the garden… I won’t be feeding them to caterpillars again this year, but will they ever be safe for caterpillars now? Like next year?

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.