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Fantasy Butterfly 2009 Geocoin Des ailes de cuivre

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Owner:
starchild313 Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Monday, March 22, 2010
Origin:
Mississippi, United States
Recently Spotted:
Unknown Location

This is not collectible.

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Current Goal

To migrate around the world and make a photo album of my travels!

About This Item

Here I am


My name means Wings of Copper, Please help me to be one of these butterflies, but instead of just migrating north to south, I want to migrate around the whole world and find the perfect place to live!

I have a friend out traveling the world too....if we ever meet, please photograph us together.  Her name is Periwinkle and you can track here here 4K988V

Also, if you don't mind, please upload a photo of the area where you leave me. That way I can always remember where I've been.

Did You Know:
Many butterflies that spend the summer in temperate North America cannot survive northern winters. Each year, as the weather becomes warmer, butterflies from Mexico and the southern United States fly north to repopulate these regions. Species that move northward each year include Cloudless Sulphur, Little Yellow, Gulf Fritillary, Painted Lady, American Lady, Red Admiral, Common Buckeye, Long-tailed Skipper, Clouded Skipper, Fiery Skipper, Sachem, and Ocola Skipper. For most species these northward dispersals are gradual, but, in especially good years, one can see Painted Ladies, Cloudless Sulphurs or Clouded Skippers streaming northward along migratory routes.
For some species the reverse migration, south in the fall, is more obvious. Cloudless Sulphurs, Mourning Cloaks, Question Marks, and especially Queens and Monarchs can sometimes be found moving southward in groups of thousands. Exactly where all of these butterflies go is not known. Monarchs are the most well-known of migratory butterflies. But even here our knowledge is limited. We know that most of the Monarchs from west of the Rocky Mountains spend the winter along the California coast while those from central North America spend the winter in roosts in the mountains of central Mexico. But what about the Monarchs from the Atlantic seaboard? Although it seems that many of them also migrate to the same Mexican mountain overwintering sites, others may travel to, and through, Florida, perhaps flying on to undiscovered sites in the Caribbean and/or the Yucatan Peninsula. On the other hand, perhaps northern Monarchs that enter the peninsula don't survive the winter and, for them, Florida is a dead end. Some Monarchs do seem to overwinter in Florida, but these may be largely members of resident, non-migratory, populations. At this point, we just don't know.

Gallery Images related to Des ailes de cuivre

View All 5 Gallery Images

Tracking History (26772.1mi) View Map

Visited 11/11/2018 watcache took it to Wildbore 31 (Utuwai School) North Island, New Zealand - 6.93 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/11/2018 watcache took it to Wildbore 25 (Mt Richards School) North Island, New Zealand - 6.11 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/11/2018 watcache took it to Wildbore 13 (Pohangina Cemetery) North Island, New Zealand - .46 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/11/2018 watcache took it to Wildbore 14 (Moar Farm) North Island, New Zealand - 2.31 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/11/2018 watcache took it to Wildbore 15 (Holley's Hill) North Island, New Zealand - 10.89 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/10/2018 watcache took it to Stickman 16 (manawatu) North Island, New Zealand - .73 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/10/2018 watcache took it to Stickman 24 (manawatu) North Island, New Zealand - .23 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/10/2018 watcache took it to Stickman 26 (manawatu) North Island, New Zealand - .54 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/10/2018 watcache took it to Stickman 20 (Manawatu) North Island, New Zealand - .48 miles  Visit Log
Visited 11/10/2018 watcache took it to Stickman 3 (manawatu) North Island, New Zealand - .45 miles  Visit Log
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