Rigdon Monarchs & Meadows: Monarchs in Rigdon


Guest Blogger: Tanya Harvey


Below is an excerpt from Tanya Harvey’s blog, follow the link to read the full article: A Week of Monarchs and Milkweed: Day 1 . Banner photo courtesy of Tanya Harvey.

Monarchs in Rigdon

Photo credit: Tanya Harvey. Female monarch nectaring on milkweed.

Photo credit: Tanya Harvey. Female monarch nectaring on milkweed.

“We decided to access the area via an old road off of Road 2135, just past Big Pine Opening. A short bushwhack off the old road took us up to the south and lower end of the meadow complex (although we found an easier route back through more open woods on the way back). It only took a few minutes for us to spot the first monarch and the first caterpillar. Almost a week from when Sabine and I saw eggs at Monarch Meadow, it was about the right time for the eggs to start hatching.

We set about counting eggs, caterpillars, and adults in each opening. Crystal kept a count and recorded information about habitat while I took photos and put together a preliminary plant list. At this point in the year and less than 3000′ of elevation, most things were dried out, and even the milkweed was mostly beginning to go to seed, so I’m sure there will be many more plants to add to the list that we didn’t spot that day. What we did see looked pretty much the same as what was growing in Monarch Meadow, with the exception of a population of field pussytoes (Antennaria howellii), a species I’ve seen much higher up near Balm Mountain (see Another Exciting Day in the Calapooyas: The Sequel) and in one higher elevation spot in Douglas County.”


Tanya Harvey.jpg

Tanya Harvey is an amateur botanist and gardener who has been in love with plants as long as she can remember. Officially, she’s an artist, craftsperson, and designer (check out her work at tanyaharveydesign.com).

With the Western Cascades as her backyard, she spend as much time as she can botanizing the Western Cascades and, in the interests of science, conservation, and beauty, she shares what she learns through her website (westerncascades.com).

Tanya is also a member of the Oregon Native Pant Society and the North American Butterfly Association and co-author of the Oregon Flora Volume 2.