TCNJ

TCNJ Magazine Spring 2025

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29 SPRING 2025 WORDS Kara Pothier ILLUSTRATIONS Vivian Shih PEGGY CAMPBELL-RUSH '76 is all aflutter as she crosses seeing the monarch butterfly migration off her bucket list. "I 've been intrigued by the monarch butterfly since I was a little girl," says Peggy Campbell-Rush '76, remembering late August days in Ship Bottom, New Jersey, when she'd try to catch one of the hundreds that flew around her. What she didn't know back then was that her childhood wonder placed her in the middle of a natural marvel that she would later come to know intimately: the majestic, yet somewhat mysterious, monarch migration. Each year, tens of millions of monarch butterflies — with their iconic orange wings and black and white markings — travel a two-way migration over the course of about eight months. First, they spend the summer breeding on milkweed plants throughout the eastern U.S. and Canada. In late August, they journey over 3,000 miles south to the Michoacán mountains of Mexico, where they rest for the winter. Then come spring, they fly north again to start a new breeding season. 29 SPRING 2025

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