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2025 Mobile Migration

Tag: Monarchs on the Mountain

Monarchs on the Mountain 2025

Join the celebration of Eastern Oklahoma’s vital role in the incredible Monarch butterfly migration! Featuring education activities for all ages, tasty food trucks, guest presentation by
David Redhage, native plant sales, and more! 

This event is free to the public!

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2024 Mobile Migration


Again in 2024, we are hosting a Mobile Migration activity, symbolizing the Tri-Nation migration of Monarchs from their northern breeding grounds up along the Canadian/US border south through the US East of the Rockies to their over-wintering grounds in the Oyamel fir forests of Central Mexico, a nearly 3000-mile journey!  We have chosen 6 gardens ranging from Oxley Nature Center as our northernmost point, down to the Audubon Society’s Flycatcher Trail in Jenks.  In between are some nifty locations many of you may be unaware of.  Signage at each location will tell you some interesting things about the various unique aspects of how the migration coincides with stages of a Monarch’s life cycle and the generational progression of their journey!  Enjoy and have fun!


Past Mobile Migration Habitats

  1. Oxley Nature Center – Tucked away in a corner of Mohawk Park, is the hidden jewel of the Tulsa Parks
    Department. Opened in 1980, the wildlife preserve consists of 800 acres of mixed biomes with over 9 miles of
    trails. Your quest here is to check out the Monarch Way Station next to the entrance to the Nature Center, and
    the small garden across the parking lot in Fawn Grove. The more adventurous amongst you may opt for a short
    hike out into the prairie and around the pond.
  2. Master Gardeners OSU Extension Garden – The Master Gardeners work their magic with various native plants
    labeled as nectar sources in planted beds and some cool water features.
  3. Teaching Garden – The Butterfly Garden section outside the main garden is a Monarch Magnet with two big
    Vitex bushes and other nectar plants. The adjacent Garden Center beds and upper Rose Garden beds have a
    variety of nectar sources, and roosting Monarchs may be found in the line of Cedar trees between Linnaeus and
    the Rose Garden.
  4. Crow Creek Meadow– A tiny, easy-to-overlook locale near Brookside, CCM currently has lots of Senna,
    (Partridge Pea) the host plant for Cloudless Sulphurs in buttery yellow bloom, in addition to Cowpen Daisy and
    Spanish Gold. Swing by throughout the year to see what is in season!
  5. Krauses’ Family Garden – This property, tucked firmly in Mid-Town at 3727 S. Xanthus, is home to over a dozen
    species of host and nectar plants, planned to offer home and sustenance throughout the growing season.
  6. Flycatcher Trail– Founded by the Tulsa Audubon Society and in conjunction with Jenks Public Schools, this
    gorgeous outdoor classroom and demonstration garden hosts a plethora of native plant species and the many
    pollinators drawn to these hosts and nectar sources.


**Join the #MobileMigration2024 Challenge!**

Participate in our exciting mobile migration event by visiting each of the seven migration stops. At each location, snap a selfie with the migration poster in the frame and share it on our Facebook page using the hashtag **#mobilemigration2024**. Be sure to leave a comment on your post to let us know which stop you’re at!

**Win a Fantastic Prize!**

 

On Sunday evening, we’ll randomly select winners to receive four passes to visit the Tulsa Zoo. Winners will be announced on our Facebook page, so make sure to check back and see if you’ve won!

Happy migrating!

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Monarch Media Monday 2023

Join us for a virtual interview on Monday, September 25th at 7PM as we celebrate the 8th annual Monarchs on the Mountain event hosted by the Tulsa Urban Wilderness Coalition. We’re thrilled to have Sara Dykman, the author of “Bicycling with Butterflies,” and the founder of Beyond a Book, as our guest. Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to engage with Sara Dykman and learn more about her journey and experiences.

The Trip:

In 2017 Sara Dykman became the first person to follow – by bicycle – the eastern population of monarch butterflies on their roundtrip, multinational, multigenerational migration. From Mexico to Canada and back, her 10,201 mile adventure,on a beat-up bicycle , was a call to action. “The monarchs need us,” Dykman explained, “they can’t call politicians to demand healthy prairies or rally for native gardens. But we can. We might not be able to fly like butterflies, but we can bike alongside them, and be their voice.”

Why monarchs?

As a whole, the migration advances at a pace a cyclist can cover. They also spread out in the millions across a landscape traced with roads, so there were few route-planning limitations. At home in backyards, school gardens, parks, roadside ditches, and the wildest places, monarchs are democratic in their reach. They are also beautiful and easy to spot, making them excellent gateway bugs and ambassadors of nature. Robustly studied yet still the subject of many unanswered questions, they are a testament to science. Threatened with extinction, the monarchs remind us what is at stake, and how important it is for each of us to do our part.

“You don’t have to quit your job and bike thousands of miles to help the monarchs,” explained Dykman. “You can plant milkweed, plant native nectar plants, and be a voice for the monarch. That’s what my trip, and my book, are all about.”

The Book:

Deftly combining travel memoir and popular science, Bicycling with Butterflies (Timber Press, April 2021) recounts Dykman’s inspirational ride alongside the monarchs. The cast of characters includes eager schoolchildren, devoted citizen scientists, skeptical bar patrons, fellow bicyclists. climate deniers, unimpressed border officials, and -of course- millions of monarchs. Dykman passionately shares the urgent plight of the monarchs and the complex science underpinning their dwindling numbers. Filled with optimism, energy, and hope, Bicycling with Butterflies is a compelling story, confirming the urgency of saving the threatened monarch migration—and the other threatened systems of nature that affect the survival of us all. “It is part science, part adventure, part love letter to nature,” Dykman explained. “I hope readers will come away with a deeper sense of connection to the land and be inspired to join the team taking care of our planet.”

“On this improbably adventure, Sara Dykman followed the extraordinary monarch migration by bicycle, and came back to write about it. She has recorded it well. Her almost incredible account captures the animal itself, the continent it crosses, and its plight with style and deep connection.” —Robert Michael Pyle, author of Chasing Monarchs and founder of the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation

“People have long been fascinated by the monarch butterfly’s migration across the North American continent. Thanks to this book, readers have a better idea of what that incredible journey entails… Dykman’s enthusiasm will motivate others to be more thoughtful about their decisions.” —Library Journal

“The book is just as much a poetic travelogue as it is informative about monarch butterflies. Dykman’s research keenly supplements her experiences on the road…it may be one singular bicyclist’s word, but represents a collective cry for climate action.”—Booklist

Sara’s Bio:

Sara Dykman is the founder of beyondabook.org, which fosters lifelong learners, boundary pushers, explorers, and stewards. She works in amphibian research and as an outdoor educator, guiding young people into nature so they can delight in its complicated brilliance. She hopes her own adventures—walking from Mexico to Canada, canoeing the Missouri River from source to sea, and cycling over 80,000 miles across North and South America (including the monarch migration trip)—will empower young and old to dream big.

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Monarch Media Monday

Join us for Monarch Media Monday, an hour-long panel discussion with the following experts:

  • Stacie Martin – Director of Horticulture at Gathering Place, to learn how to establish and maintain prairies, Incorporate native plants and Milkweed, weed control, and more. 
  • Cheryl Cheadle – Blue Thumb volunteer coordinator as she discusses how you can create quality pollinator habitat on a smaller scale, Yard by Yard.
  • Jane Breckenridge – Owner Euchee Butterfly Farm and director of the Tribal Alliance for Pollinators will share her expertise on Monarch Basics and the status of the Monarch population.

There will be time for questions and answers at the end of the panel discussion.

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