JM Butterfly B&B - Macheros S/N

4.8/5 based on 8 reviews

About JM Butterfly B&B

Their existence threatened, monarch butterflies didn't receive the protection hoped for under the Endangered Species List in an announcement last week. The U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service said Dec. 15 that while a listing was warranted, there were "higher priority" species in need.

While the news no doubt disappointed many supporters of monarchs, a report from Austin, Minn., was a reminder of a truth: The regal beauties are resilient like few other things in the wild.

On Aug. 26, a local boy placed a small, adhesive tag on a monarch — a tracker of sorts — during a program at Jay C. Hormel Center and sent it on its way. Eighty-seven days and more than 2,000 miles later, the tag was recovered in the butterflies' winter grounds in central Mexico. The monarch had landed.

It's not the first time evidence of a butterfly in Minnesota has materialized south of the border. But the discovery still stands as a minor miracle given what the pollinators are up against.

Already a species whose habitat of native flowering plants is under threat, they migrate south by the millions every fall from the United States and Canada. There are risks of harsh weather and predators, too. It's estimated only 30% to 70% survive the long miles south.

The Minnesota-to-Mexico connection started when Hunter Peters, 11, placed tag "ABUL 048" on a male's wing, one of more than 50 monarchs tagged that day at the center, said director Luke Reese. They were among more than 400 captured, tagged and released there in August and September. The tags came from Monarch Watch, a conservation organization that distributes more than a quarter of a million every fall and tracks their recovery.

Guardian Francisco Moreno Hernandez found the monarch tag on a leaf near the Cerro Pelon’s El Llano colony during a work break.

Word came of ABUL 048 on Nov. 22 via Facebook. Ellen Sharp, the co-founder of Butterflies & Their People, reported that one of her nonprofit's "forest guardians," Francisco Moreno Hernandez, had found the tag on a leaf Nov. 21, no butterfly in sight. Sharp reached out to Monarch Watch, which tracked ABUL 048 to its Minnesota origins.

ABUL 048 was the first tag of the season found in the 8,000-acre Cerro Pelon sanctuary, said Sharp, whose conservation work is anchored there. Remote and rugged amid fir, cedar and pine, Cerro Pelon is one of several butterfly sanctuaries in Michoacán and Mexico, two bordering states where the butterflies colonize. She employs six forest guardians who live in the area, in her mission to support them and the marvels in the air. Monarch Watch provides incentive, too, paying $5 for every recovered tag, money that stretches far in the region. Monarch Watch has reported 323 tags recovered so far in 2020.

Sharp also co-owns JM Butterfly B&B, an eco-tourism business at the Macheros entrance to the sanctuary. The pandemic has closed Cerro Pelon to visitors, an economic hit for the communities that rely on tourists to pour in between November and March to see the monarch colonies, Sharp said. The B&B will host upward of 800 people in a typical season, and offer day trips to hundreds more. Sharp said the El Rosario and Sierra Chincua sanctuaries in Michoacan reopened Nov. 28. El Rosario has reported as many as 8,000 visitors in a weekend in previous years.

Amid the challenges, Sharp said news of ABUL 048 has been a welcome lift.

"It was nice to have something to make us feel tied in again," Sharp said. That the tag was found without its butterfly was different, too, she added. Many times they're recovered on dead monarchs on the ground. But not in this instance.

"It also is encouraging, too, this butterfly could live to mate and migrate to Texas. Who knows?" she said, referring to butterflies' migration back in late February.

A remarkable parallel

Karen Oberhauser is a conservation biologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She's also a monarch expert who spent many years at the University of Minnesota researching them.

Oberhauser recalled the case of another Minnesota monarch, whose tag — "ps 397" — was spotted in January 1975 in the Cerro Pelon sanctuary just as the great migration was coming to light. The monarch was tagged in Minnesota by a North Hopkins Junior High student of naturalist Jim Gilbert, a teacher at the time. (Gilbert is a weekly contributor to Outdoors Weekend.)

Gilbert had received the tags from an associate, Fred Urquhart, a leading entomologist studying the monarch migration. Coincidentally, it was Urquhart who picked up the tag in Cerro Pelon's mountains while he was with a National Geographic photographer. A tree branch weighed heavy with butterflies broke, sending thousands to the ground. Urquhart sat among them.

"I reached into a pile of butterflies and was amazed when I picked up the tagged specimen, which, of course, the photographer snapped immediately. The butterfly was in excellent condition," Urquhart told Gilbert in a letter.

The butterfly was the first tagged monarch found in Mexico — a discovery that brought new focus to the improbable migration.

"It's just such a wonderful connection to that very first tag," Oberhauser said. "The parallels are pretty cool."

Oberhauser recalled a trip to Mexico after years of studying breeding monarchs in the Midwest. Finally visiting their winter home was validating, she said.

"What I just remember thinking when I looked at those millions of butterflies in the trees is that every single one of those monarchs is an amazing story of survival because I knew how few of them survived being eggs and caterpillars. It's like two of out of a hundred. … Each one of them is a miracle."

Hunter, the young tagger, might believe in miracles now. He said he had so much fun tagging monarchs earlier that he returned Aug. 26, with his grandmother Verna Heuertz. He said he tagged multiple ones that day, ABUL 048 among them, while his grandmother recorded data.

He was happy to hear that his butterfly had survived the trip. "I was very excited when I first found it. I knew they went. I didn't know that they went that far in that amount of time," Hunter said.

Reese said tags placed at the center have surfaced before in Mexico, but this year's news was extra rewarding.

"In 2020, when things are so negative, knowing about this put a smile on my face," he said.

Bob Timmons • 612-673-7899

Contact JM Butterfly B&B

Address :

Go left at the church in the center of town, Macheros S/N, 51030 Méx., Mexico

Phone : 📞 +799
Postal code : 51030
Website : http://cerropelonbutterflybnb.com/
Categories :
City : Méx.

Go left at the church in the center of town, Macheros S/N, 51030 Méx., Mexico
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lisa steinberg on Google

This place is great. The staff and owner (Joel and his family) are so friendly and accommodating. Internet was good. Rooms were cute. They have a pool. The way it's set up encourages the guests to socialize with each other. Sunset is beautiful. Use them for your butterfly expedition. Really. Joel took care of every detail and yes get the lentil salad as your lunch on the tour. Even though it was chilly on the day we did our tour to Cerro pelon, Joel encouraged us to stay and wait for the amazing swarm of butterflies. I'm so glad we did. P.s. Plan to not wear your clothes after the tour. It's pretty dusty.
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Laura Chenault on Google

We just returned for a trip to Mexico to see the Monarch butterflies. We spent two nights with Joel and his family at JM Butterfly B&B and loved every minutes of our stay. We toured both Cerro Pelon and El Rosario as well as getting a Village Tour to meet some of the local artisans and see them work. What a treat to get a view of the local culture as well as one of the natural world's greatest wonders. I am greatly impressed with Joel's motivation and energy which has brought money and resources to an area which has few economic opportunities. This is good for the local people as well as the Monarchs which all us of going to JM Butterfly B&B are hoping can be saved in the coming decades.
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See Me on Google

Cerro Pelon is the best place to see the monarchs in Mexico and JM Butterfly B&B is the best place to stay for a true cultural experience. Our room was large and filled with local art. The bed was very comfortable and we slept well there. The hosts are your guides to the sanctuary and they know how and when to visit the monarchs. They truly care about the butterflies and about preserving their natural habitat. So glad we chose JM for this amazing trip!
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Thomas Green on Google

Love how they support the local economy. They are eager to please and extremely knowledgeable. They help support and developed the local nonprofit the helps patrol the forest for illegal logging. The restaurant on site is superb featuring local trout. Breakfast comes with stay and it is tremendous. Internet worked well. We stayed in the sunset room with an amazing view of the mountains.
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Deborah Benson on Google

Just returned from a fabulous trip to tour 2 monarch sanctuaries with J&M. Anna, Will and the other staff were fantastic guides and hosts. Riding the horses up and down the mountains was difficult for me. Couldn't have done it without the helpful staff! Excellent food, tours and room comfort. Great way to check off my bucket list!
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Marcus Yoder on Google

I will never forget my trip here. The rooms were delightful and the beds were the most comfortable I stayed in while in Mexico. Although the rooms were unheated, the blankets were amazing. The food was excellent, but the best thing was the hosts. Joel and his sister Ana were welcoming and kind. They talked to us about butterflies and Mexican life. I will remember the trip to see the butterflies for the rest of my life. The air was full of butterflies and the trees were so covered in monarchs you could hardly see any green. Joel and Ana knew the best time and place to go. I will forever be in awe.
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Jess Ramsey on Google

Very well appointed hotel with comfortable beds, warm blankets for the cold nights, gorgeous views, and an excellent on site restaurant. The staff is kind and personable. Their butterfly tour is incredible. The big show from the butterflies is largely weather-dependent. So trust that your guides do their very best to show you the monarchs, but they can't make them fly! Family run business. Very small town. Arrive with flexibility and a sense of adventure and you'll love it!
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Elizabeth Nguyen on Google

had a very wonderful trip to see the monarchs with JM Butterfly B&B. we took a bus from zitácuaro and then a taxi following the instructions provided by the B&B. it's a full travel day but very do-able. bus is comfortable and runs frequently. it was easy to do a COVID test as arranged by the B&B in order to travel back to the US. accommodations are lovely - a rooftop for looking at stars and sunsets and a pool overlooking mountains were particularly stunning. all of the tours were well done with lots of knowledge shared and care about the experience. food at the restaurant is delicious and served by a cozy fireplace. definitely recommend. enjoy!

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