
On Sunday morning, I noticed the chrysalis on my back porch that I had nurtured was turning black. This could be a good sign or a bad sign. I found the swallowtail caterpillar in my friend’s garden when she was offering me two dill plants for my student’s butterfly garden project. I took the cactus it was hanging out on as well as some dill for feeding it.
When the little puffed up caterpillar made its chrysalis, he did it on the dill. Yikes, I knew the dill would die eventually because it was just in water. What actually happened was the dill stem bent down. No! The chrysalis must stay in the position it was made in.
I found a stick in my yard, placed it next to the dill stem with the chrysalis and tied then together with dental floss. I wasn’t sure it would work. This chrysalis traveled home in my car and sat on my back porch for another week. Until Sunday.
There he was, like a miracle, fully formed and on the just right day before the school week started again. I was able to take him to school, show him off to students in the hallway and with the gentle help of Avalyn, we released him into the wild.
My friend Mary who originally gave me the caterpillar is out of town tending to her brother Carlos. I named the butterfly Carlos and now he is roaming free somewhere in Coteau. We hope our newly planted butterfly garden nurtures him, but as with all wild things, we will never know.
Such a happy story!
There is always such joy and wonder in watching the transformation of caterpillar to chrysalis to butterfly! You describe this so beautifully here. My milkweed is growing tall, but no sign of caterpillars yet – I’m keeping my eyes peeled.
This story is a definite bright spot! Thanks for stepping in, helping out a fellow creature, and sharing the wonder with some young ones. Lovely!
Thank you for including the video. With such care, this precious creature was released. What a gift to teach your students – to care for all living things.
I love how you feared for your chrysalis and propped the dill up straight! Also love the gentle hands in the video. Such a sweet adventure- so good you took it to school to share. And I hope Carlos feels the freedom of his namesake…
Oh, Margaret, wow. I love how you saved the chrysalis with a stick and dental floss. A MacGyver butterfly saver! Avalyn’s careful touch and moving Carlos to the butterfly garden was just precious. Thank you for sharing.