Animal Encounters!

Today is another installment of the weekly online/social media travel round table called Travelers Night In (TNI) during which travelers from around the world share, discuss and debate one  travel topic. This week’s topic is Animal Encounters and that got us thinking.

We haven’t visited Africa or done a safari there (yet), but we have had some amazing animal encounters in other parts of the world. In Borneo we were essentially held captive by the frighteningly dexterous hands and feet of a young orangutan. In India we were within feet of endangered Asiatic lions and tigers and even a leopard which played a  kind of hide-and-seek game with us (it won).

In November we’re going to get the chance to hang with penguins when we explore Antarctica with Antarctic Dream. Why not take advantage of  our exclusive 30% savings to Antarctica and join us on the November 7-17 sailing, by the way?

Our ongoing Trans-Americas Journey has also given us some amazing animal encounters and here are a few of the highlights:

A herd of buffalo literally roamed our campground in Badlands National Park.

See more in our Badlands National Park photo gallery. Read more in our Badlands National Park  travel journal.

A black bear and her cub explored some downed trees just off a road through Yellowstone National Park.

See more in our Yellowstone National Park photo gallery. Read more in our Yellowstone National Park travel journal.

This young wolf seemd as curious about us as we were about it when our paths crossed on the Gunflint Trail in Minnesota.

See more in our Minnesota’s North Shore photo gallery. Read more in our Minnesota’s North Shore travel journals part 1 and part 2.

A moose and her calf appeared around a bend during a hike in Grand Teton National Park.

See more in our Grand Teton National Park photo gallery.

A female grizzly and her cub let us watch them feasting on blueberries in Denali National park for almost an hour.

See more in our Denali National Park photo galleries – part 1, part 2, and part 3. Read more in our Denali National Park travel journals part 1, part 2 and part 3.

Muskox roam the tundra on the North Slope in Alaska where we spotted them from a helcopter.

See more in our Deadhorse, Alaska photo gallery. Read more in our Deadhorse, Alaska travel journal.

This arctic fox already had its winter white coat on so it was easy to spot in the tundra in the North Slope of Alaska.

See more in our Dalton Highway photo gallery. Read more in our Dalton Highway travel journals part 1 and part 2.

Gray whales put on an impressive show for us in Baja.

Gray whales, including this baby, put on an impressive show for us in Baja.

We wandered amongst millions of migrating monarch butterflies near Valle de Bravo in Mexico.

See more in our monarch butterfly migration post.

Crocodiles of all sizes lazed near our boat as we traveled to La Tovara Springs in San Blas, Nayarit, Mexico.

See more in our San Blas, Nayarit Mexico post.

Mara the sea lion shared her fish breath with us in the warm waters off Puerto Vallarta.

See more in our Sea Lion Kisses post.

Thousands of flamingos went about their strange pink business as we floated through the Ria Lagartos Biosphere Reserve in Yucatan State, Mexico.

We failed to find the whale sharks in Belize but a pod of bottlenose dolphins found us.

See more in our Belize Whale Sharks post.

This spider monkey was just hanging out near Chan Chich Lodge in Gallon Jug, Belize.

See more in our Belize Jungle Surprises post.

A keel-billed toucan stayed put long enough for us to capture its impossible beak at La Milpa Field Station in Belize.

See more in our Belize Jungle Surprises post.

We tried our best to see a jaguar in the wild, but the closest we've come so far is this beauty in the Belize Zoo.

See more in our Belize Zoo post.

A clan of howler monkeys befriended us while we camped at Las Guacamayas in Chiapas.

Wild scarlet macaws gorged themselves in a tree above our tent at Las Guacamayas in Chiapas.


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Mexico’s Million Monarch Migration – Valle de Bravo, Mexico

As another season of epic annual monarch butterfly migration comes to an end here in Mexico, we started thinking about our accidental encounters with the fluttery masses last year.

And we do mean accidental.

One of the more exciting road signs in Mexico.

We were driving along  hwy 134 from Mexico City toward Valle de Bravo just minding our own damn business. Our first hint that something was in the air came when Mexican police cars suddenly veered into traffic and slowed all cars to a crawl. As a growing convoy of frustrated drivers crept around a corner the reason for the hold-up came into view: swarms of monarchs flying down the road in a slow-mo river of gold and black. These “butterfly cops” (as we dubbed them) were there to ensure that moving vehicles didn’t hit too many butterflies—or each other—in the winged confusion.

This monarch, and millions of others just like it, fly thousands of miles from the US and Canada to Mexico every year.

Most drivers kept going but we pulled over into the first turnout we saw along the highway. Soon we were hiking up a steep, dusty trail into the forest behind a handful of Mexican visitors in pursuit of what we could only hope was the home roost of the monarchs we’d just seen along the road.

Something in the air in Mexico.What looks like gently falling confetti is actually swarms of flitting butterflies.

Every year, between November and March, hundreds of millions of monarchs somehow navigate their way to the exact same areas of Central Mexico —some flying 5,000 miles or more from where they were born in Canada and the northern US. Scientists say they’re drawn to Mexico’s fir trees, but can’t provide a more complete explanation than that. Once the butterflies arrive, they rest and eat then mate like crazy before attempting the return flight home. Most never make it.

It’s one of the most puzzling, fragile and mind-boggling migrations on the planet and it gives those lucky enough to visit Mexico’s dozen or so protected monarch migration grounds the unique opportunity to see millions of butterflies in one place. There are so many of the orange and black beauties that the air is alive with the sound of their wings. Tree branches bend to the ground under their collective weight. They even begin to give off a not-so-beautiful smell, not to mention their aforementioned ability to stop traffic.

Thousands of butterflies rest in their beloved fir trees, cumulatively weighing enough to bend the branches down as if they were covered in snow.

Some of Mexico’s better known butterfly havens, like El Rosario, are becoming less of a haven as the hiking boots (and the horse hooves of those who take for the “easy” way up) of thousands of visitors churn up the hiking trails into dust bowls and encourage hillside erosion and fir tree loss.  That many humans also create noise and movement that stresses the colony.

But thanks to the Mexican police force we’d stumbled upon the Piedra Herrada site roughly 15 miles outside Valle de Bravo. This newly opened viewing area is one of a handful of migration locations in Central Mexico which attract one third of the world’s monarch population every year.

The hike was steep (prompting some potty-mouthed grumbling from a woman dressed for brunch, not for hiking) and the weather was hot. Some visitors opted to ride up on one of the handful of petite horses-for-hire, a proposition that looked even more uncomfortable than walking.

At the end of a 1,100 foot climb into the mountains there were still no butterflies in sight but we plodded on winding our way up through the thick forest and the thin air above 7,000 feet.

An hour later we were met by two uniformed local men, trained as official monarch monitors. They collected 23 pesos per person and admitted only a dozen or so people at a time into a roped off hillside viewing area roughly 50 feet from the pulsating colony. We were all under strict orders to move slowly and talk quietly and we remained under the watchful eye of these monitors for as long as we remained within the roped off area. It’s one of the few times we’ve felt grateful for being supervised as the monitors shhh’d and admonished with responsibility, care and obvious respect for the butterflies.

At the Piedra Herrada site, thousands of butterflies rest on the fir trees that they love, weighing down the branches like snow. Those dark clumps are all butterflies.

Yep, all those dark patches are monarch butterflies.

Encouraged by the good conditions and manageable crowd size at Piedra Herrada we committed to finding an area even more pristine and private. And we succeeded.

The next monarch meeting place we visited was an area called Cerro Pellon outside a town called El Capulin which is about 25 miles from Valle de Bravo. The trail here was less steep and a bit shorter than the route up to the first sanctuary and our obligatory local guide allowed us to stand within 20 feet of the butterflies.

Karen on the trail to see the monarchs at Cerro Pellon.

The best part, however, was that we were there along with just five other people (three of which were guides). Plus, the trail was less steep.

Monarchs warming up in the sun at Cerro Pellon.

Thousands of monarchs but only five humans at Cerro Pellon in Mexico.

Thousands of monarchs but only five humans at Cerro Pellon in Mexico.

You'd never know that thousands of monarchs were camped out less than half a mile up this hillside at Cerro Pellon in Mexico.

Thousands of monarchs but only five humans at Cerro Pellon in Mexico.

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It’s true that the future of Mexico’s monarchs is far from certain. Loss of habitat through persistent illegal logging, insufficient funding for the 124,000 acre Monarca Biosphere Reserve which straddles two states and encompasses most of the migration points and over-visitation threatens the butterflies.

To address some of those issues Mexican President Felipe Calderon pledged to add $4.6 million to the $36.4 million annual budget for the Biosphere Reserve (a UNESCO World Heritage Site) back in 2007. However, illegal logging (it’s a felony) and even clear cutting within protected monarch habitat is an ongoing problem as a quick Google Maps overview of some areas brings into stark relief.

Monarchs enjoying Mexico's sunshine

Our advice? Get yourself to Valle de Bravo, a charming Pueblo Magico (they don’t call it the Switzerland of Mexico for nothing) in time for next year’s migration. And note that later in the monarch season (late February and early March) warmer temperatures lure the butterflies lower down the hillsides shaving distance off your hike up to reach them.



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