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  #1  
Old 10/02/04, 10:22 AM
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Vermont
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Does anyone know what this is??

I found a HUGE green catepillar in my house this morning. Actually the dogs woke me up "playing" with it and getting rowdy. I tried a search on google, but I can't find anything except this picture at another website that is asking for identification. I put it out in my front yard, as I really don't know what it is so I'm not going to kill it.

Does anyone know what this is?? - Homesteading Questions

I measured it at 6.2" long!! When I first saw it, I thought it was a small snake that the dogs had tried to kill...but then again, I didn't have my glasses on.

Last edited by Jenco; 10/02/04 at 10:24 AM.
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  #2  
Old 10/02/04, 10:42 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenco
I found a HUGE green catepillar in my house this morning. Actually the dogs woke me up "playing" with it and getting rowdy. I tried a search on google, but I can't find anything except this picture at another website that is asking for identification. I put it out in my front yard, as I really don't know what it is so I'm not going to kill it.

Does anyone know what this is?? - Homesteading Questions

I measured it at 6.2" long!! When I first saw it, I thought it was a small snake that the dogs had tried to kill...but then again, I didn't have my glasses on.
Thats is what I always heard called a Tomato worm. If you have a garden, you had probably better check it for others. They prefer tomatos but will chew up beans, gourds,corn and well, just about anything else. Ugly little criiters aren't they, especially with that "horn".
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  #3  
Old 10/02/04, 11:01 AM
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Here's a stock photo just like the nasty we caught in my parents' garden a couple of weeks ago. Thanks for helping to identify it! We've been wondering what it was.

Does anyone know what this is?? - Homesteading Questions
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  #4  
Old 10/02/04, 11:22 AM
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Indiana
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go to google imags, and type in green caterpillar...theres quite a few...google images is how I found my house centipede.




Sorry, that was supposed to say "images" not imags
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  #5  
Old 10/02/04, 11:52 AM
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My chickens will hang outside the garden fence while I gather hornworms. They'll fight over them like old ladies at the blue-light special! I figure Momma Nature puts them there so I can make my chickens happy! They are almost beautiful...until the parasitic wasps lay on them. The chickens don't get those. I leave them to grow another crop of hornworm parasites.

Meg
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  #6  
Old 10/02/04, 12:19 PM
 
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It's a tomato hornworm. If you see it in the garden and it has little white eggs all over it--leave it. It means that a paper wasp, a beneficial insect in the garden--has laid it's eggs on it and the larvae will eat it up and kill it. Saves you having to spray and it encourages good bugs that will keep the bad in check. Win-Win.
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  #7  
Old 10/02/04, 12:44 PM
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I agree with the identification, and the point made that the chickens, once they figure it out, absolutely love them......Margo
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  #8  
Old 10/02/04, 01:02 PM
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Wow!!! 6.2 inches is a lot of caterpillar!!! The longest one I've ever seen was a little less than three inches. They sure grow big in Arizona, or maybe they just grow small in Texas. :haha:
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  #9  
Old 10/02/04, 03:57 PM
 
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That's really gross.
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  #10  
Old 10/02/04, 06:48 PM
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
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I used to see those in CA all the time on tomatoo plants. Don't they become those huge moths I used to see flopping around once in awhile?
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  #11  
Old 10/02/04, 07:23 PM
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
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I was totally grossed out the first time I saw a tomato worm. Yuk! I found it on my favorite little plum tree. It had already eaten an entire branch. Wouldn't bother me a bit if I never saw another one.
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  #12  
Old 10/02/04, 10:42 PM
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
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Tomato Hornworm

I have only seen them once in 10 yrs of gardening in SoCal. Had a single plant get 2 or 3 of them one year. I garden organically, so the beneficial wasps must be abundant, and I get none of these guys.

Unfortunately I get slugs and snails and squirrels and earwigs and cutworms and everything else known to man.
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  #13  
Old 10/03/04, 11:21 AM
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Vermont
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Thanks everyone for helping me to identify it! The dogs brought it in the house from outside (what a nice present, eh?) and I'm not sure which one of my backyard plants it may have been on as I can't find anymore back there.
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