The other day our terrier came into the house with a large, green caterpillar in his mouth. We got it away from him before he could eat it but it was clearly dead.
Our deck off the back of the house has a pergola that is covered by layers of grape vines. It provides nice shade and also harbors birds who like to eat the grapes. A night or two ago I was sitting on the deck when the green wiggler in the header photo dropped to the floor right in front of me. I guess the vines also provide a nice environment for caterpillar development. The caterpillar was still alive, so I moved it into some bushes so the birds and dog would have difficulty finding it. I hope it gets a chance to form a cocoon.
One of my favorite memories from Grade 3 is finding a really big cocoon and bringing it to class. My teacher let me keep it in the classroom, and a couple of days later we came to school to find an enormous Cercropia moth flying around the room. I don’t know what kind of caterpillar our green one is, but I hope it doesn’t turn into a destructive moth.
Any idea what kind of caterpillar this is? Ever have an insect collection?
No and no. While I am pretty sure that I would have moved the caterpillar as well because I have moved daddy longlegs and other critters before, I’m not a big insect/bug person.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It is a Privet Hawk Moth Caterpillar. That is a beautiful caterpillar but the picture of the moth is pretty ho hum. Pretty common.
LikeLiked by 4 people
I guess that takes care of the caterpillar I. D.
I’ve had collections of insects but never on purpose.
LikeLiked by 4 people
Oh, that! As a young adult I had to learn some lessons in food storage to prevent insect collections. Yesterday I chased some flies around all day. One persisted into bedtime and buzzed my head. Argh.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Those bug traps that attract insects with a blue light are very effective.
LikeLike
I was thinking maybe Sphinx moth. Those are the ones that are sometimes mistaken for humminbirdes. https://fmr.org/sphinx-moth-caterpillars-green-giants-wandering-stage
LikeLiked by 2 people
Another Sphinx moth caterpillar photo….https://www.instagram.com/p/DMl7CnMvoEC/
LikeLiked by 1 person
I had to do an insect collection for high school Biology, so they were all dead (well, we killed them in a jar with nail polish remover on cotton. I learned so much from that about our town – collected them down by the creek, etc.
I finally used chemicals to get rid of the ants this summer, had them in the kitchen and the bathroom. Before I finally used a product called Maggie’s Farm (similar to Terro), they showed me a LOT about food storage, toothpaste storage…
LikeLiked by 1 person
Rise and Come Out of Your Cocoon, Baboons,
I tried several times to have an insect collection as a kid, but I lost interest every time. There was too much other stuff to do.
We have had a great butterfly year here. We have had many different kinds and many numbers of them. The monarchs are everywhere (and we have a lot of milkweed). We have had yellow and black swallowtails, as well. Because I had surgery early in gardening season, I did not get parsley planted. Those Caterpillars eat parsley so I did not see them this year, but we still had the butterflies here.
LikeLiked by 3 people
JacAnon
LikeLike
We have very few garden pests here, mainly cabbage worms and occasionally flea beetles. I think there will be many more in Minnesota.
LikeLiked by 2 people
We had a very extensive collection of insects when I was growing up. It’s called a barn.
I keep wondering why daddy-long-legs crawl way up my patio screen door.
OT Sandra has a new hospice aide, who happens to be my granddaughter’s classmate in a class of 45 an hour west of here. He saw her picture on the fridge in Sandra’s room.
LikeLiked by 6 people
Nice.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Very little in grade school.
I won’t even consider one now.
I will kill fruit flies because I cannot capture them.
Hell, I avoid stepping on ants!
Taking a butterfly of any species as a trophy is right out!
I admit to imperfect knowledge about how insects have been part of human development but I dare say that without them humans would not exist.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Yep, just took a boxelder bug outside with my little contraption: a pint-size deli container (clear so you can see if it’s in there) to trap it, and a thin piece of cardboard that slides under the bug…
LikeLiked by 3 people