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SHOREWOOD 鈥?The monarch butterfly is one of the most easily recognized insects in North America.Theyre also pretty easy to spot in Shorewood. If you want to see one, dont chase, just wait.
stanley cup Heide Piehler with the Shorewood Library has worked hard to make sure you see one. Were trying to boost the population, she says.A few years ago, the library partnered with the Senior Resource Center to create the Shorewood Monarch Project. To inform other people about the importance of monarchs and how endangered they were, she says.Which means Heide spends a lot of time out in this garden looking at the underside of leaves. Teeny-tiny white spots found there are monarch eggs.All summer, you can watch them hatch into caterpillars, who will eventually wrap themselves up into chrysalises and then emerge as beautiful butterflies. For the kids who are slightly older,
stanley cup I actually have them take the butterfly out, put it on their finger and let them choose a flower to put it on, and its very exciting, Heide says.For those butterflies to do well after theyre released, they need a garden full of native plants like the one outside the Shorewood Library. The more plant types, the longer the bloom time. So, the more diversity we have, we would create a longer food line for them in the summer, says Ben Habanek, Shorewoods se
stanley cup becher rvices foreman. We can attract different pollinators all through the course of the entire summer, as opposed to a more narrow planting spectrum that would have a shorter bloom