ESCANABA, Mich. (Michigan News Source and Michigan Back Roads) – For many years the DNR received reports of strange, twisting clouds high above Lake Michigan called in by folks on color tours around the Leelanau peninsula.

The reports were generally dismissed as having no validity.

MORE NEWS: Trump to Confront “Biden’s Border Bloodbath” in Grand Rapids Address Next Week

Enter the age of digital cameras and hand-held video. Once it arrived, people discovered the unusual clouds were real and that they were actually enormous flocks of Monarch butterflies.

Every autumn during the last two weeks of August and the first two weeks of September, the Monarchs gather by the thousands at Stonington Point just east of Escanaba and Gladstone. Here they wait until the winds are right for the migration flight south across Lake Michigan, Green Bay and on to their winter grounds in Mexico. Usually short-lived, this generation, known as the Methuselah generation, will live long enough to make the entire Monarch migration to Mexico. After that, they return to their normal life cycle.

Stonington Point is an easy hike from the parking area. There is an abandoned lighthouse and picnic areas.

If you can’t make it to Stonington Point, Monarch Butterflies also gather at Tawas Point on Lake Huron.