Sprinterlife, traveling the Pan-American Highway- The Butterfly Effect

Greetings fellow Camper Vanomads! My fiance, Tree, and I are traveling to the tip of South America in our converted Mercedes Sprinter van–our beloved home. Below is an excerpt from our blog, We’d love it if you followed our adventures. If you have any questions or would like to leave us comments, feel free! We love being a part of a roaming community- Stevie

Greetings fellow Camper Vanomads! My fiance, Tree, and I are traveling to the tip of South America in our converted Mercedes Sprinter van–our beloved home. Below is an excerpt from our blog,. We’d love it if you followed our adventures. If you have any questions or would like to leave us comments, feel free! We love being a part of a roaming community- Stevie

The Butterfly Effect

Yesterday was extraordinary.

On our way out of Morelia, we saw a dead man in front of a bus stop, facedown in the gutter with his slumped body still on the sidewalk. His butt was up a smidge with a knee tucked underneath his torso like a sleeping toddler. My guess is that he died, fell, and then hardened in that position. The visual was jarring in and of itself, but what I found equally disturbing was that no one seemed to notice. The vendors were setting up on the corner, the morning traffic was building, and the people were walking around as if there wasn’t a dead person waiting for the bus.

A few hours later we arrived at El Rosario Butterfly Sanctuary just outside of a tiny pueblo called El Campo. It was a somewhat arduous hike up from 9,000ft to 12,000ft but worth every huff and puff of the way. Besides, our trek wasn’t nearly as long as the butterflies’. Every year, millions of Monarchs fly up to 2,500 miles from the U.S. and Canada to winter in Mexico, and we were able to see thousands of them. It was absolutely breathtaking. They looked like autumn leaves swirling in a light breeze and made a sound like purring gods—a murmur of fairy flutters that tickle the eardrums (see Monarch Video under the Featured Video on our website)! If it wasn’t for all the loud people polluting the space, we could have stayed for hours, listening to the flap of paper-thin wings.

The Monarchs have a cool story. They go through four stages (egg, caterpillar, chrysalis, butterfly) during one life cycle, and through four generations in one year. The first three generations, born between the spring and summer, only live 2-6 weeks while the fourth generation, born in the autumn, lives 6-8 months. This last generation must remain alive to migrate to the warmer climate before winter sets in up north. Most interestingly, the Monarchs winter in the same forests every year, even though they are not the same butterflies. How do they remember where their great-grandparents stayed the year before? Sadly, we many never have the chance to find out because the survival of the butterflies is deeply threatened by you-know-who.
The major threats are large-scale farming, forest degradation and human encroachment. The large-scale farming using genetically engineered crops in North America eliminates the natural plants and weeds that produce nectar for the adults and food for the larvae. Illegal logging in the highlands of central Mexico destroys or degrades their winter habitat. And, humans moving into the coastal areas of California have an impact on the winter habitat used by monarchs in the far west.

The day’s collective images and sounds got me thinking of the butterfly effect:

n (Physics / General Physics) the idea, used in chaos theory, that a very small difference in the initial state of a physical system can make a significant difference to the state at some later time, e.g. a butterfly flapping its wings in one part of the world might ultimately cause a hurricane in another part of the world.

For example, let’s say that I buy an ear of corn at the grocery store, and this ear of corn was produced on a heavily subsidized monoculture farm in the U.S. that exports most of its production. To sustain such a large output, this farm uses a plethora of pesticides and herbicides that kill milkweed, the primary food of the Monarch butterflies. Now, let’s say that our dead guy from Morelia used to feed his family by growing corn on a small farm in Michoacan, Mexico, but was displaced from his land due to the depressed global commodity price of corn caused by agribusiness in the States. He considered illegally crossing the border into the States to work as a migrant farm worker but feared being killed at the border and also loathed the idea of being so far away from his family. Instead he decided to move to Morelia to get a factory job in a sweatshop, but when he got there, he realized that thanks to NAFTA, all the factory jobs went to China. Left with little choice, he started running errands for La Familia, the drug cartel that runs Michoacan. Then, sitting at a bus stop waiting to catch a ride back to his village to feed his family, he is killed by a rival drug gang.

Okay, so maybe I’m painting in broad strokes, but you get my point: we are all interconnected on this planet and our seemingly insignificant, daily choices can make a huge difference. By simply taking small steps like choosing to shop local or using less plastic or even just raising awareness, we can have a positive impact that stretches across continents, oceans, species, and generations. There is hope for the bees, the butterflies, and us, yet, if only we try– Stevie

Posted by stevie schulman

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