Showing posts with label tussock moth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tussock moth. Show all posts

Monday, August 25, 2025

caterpillar thriller

The weather is delightful this week and I've been outside quite a bit.  Lots of activity that I would've missed if we would have had "normal" (miserably hot) late August weather!

Check out this pine tree spur-throated grasshopper.


Isn't he a beauty?


More butternut woolly sawfly caterpillars!  I love them so much. 


 This tussock moth caterpillar was suspended from a branch and just spinning in the air.


Eastern tent caterpillars were busy in this tree, protected by webbing.


Look at this beautiful guy!  It's a redbud leaffolder caterpillar, and those lines of webbing are protection against predators.


I've seen A LOT of caterpillar frass (feces) around.  It's everywhere, if you know what to look for!


We're getting a late harvest for our tomatoes this year...


...and it might have something to do with this guy.


It's a tomato hornworm caterpillar...


...and they are major munchers.

tomato hornworm damage

I found several which were parasitized.



A small wasp lays eggs within the caterpillar.  The larvae hatch, chew an entrance hole, and spin those little cocoons that you see.  These caterpillars are already dead...they just don't know it yet.  They'll die around the time that the new wasps emerge from the cocoons and seek new victims.  I left these parasitized caterpillars alone.  More wasps = fewer tomato-killing hornworms! 

My pumpkins, however, are a wash.  I thought they'd be relatively safe from squash bug, because I planted this group in a totally different location from last year.  I noticed a lot of the vines dying, but I figured it was from lack of water (I'm a "sink or swim"- type gardener lately).  

Nope.


They are everywhere.  I guess I'll be visiting a pumpkin patch this year!  

Pepita has started puppy school!  She is, by far, the tiniest pup there.  Other classmates include a 150 lb mastiff and a great dane mix!  She is learning there, but learning a lot at home too.  


She has learned to climb up on the couch cushions to peer over the half wall between the kitchen and the living room.   Important investigative skills!  


She's learned to dig holes.


"Digging?  What digging?"


Despite having the world's stubbiest legs, she's a good runner.


Meanwhile, our anti-runner has learned that he has to go to extreme measures to distract us from Pepita.  He spends a good deal of time in the kitchen, on his back, begging for belly rubs.


He's becoming a champion napper, too.


If you haven't seen Barnabas as much, well, he's staying out of the way a little bit more now.  Still getting used to Pepita.  And Claudia is nearly back to normal, although when we tried to put her outside today for a little while, she begged to go back into the barn.  I'm going to keep putting her out for a few hours a day, though.  It's perfect weather for lazing!


Have a great week!











Monday, July 22, 2024

milkweed glee

Summer is going by so quickly, which always amazes me.  But the signs are unmistakable.  Blackberries are ripening everywhere.


Flowers are starting to go to seed...to seed!  It seems so early.

bupleurum

Spring hatchlings are looking more like adults now.  This bluebird is just about ready to leave the nest...


...and these young barn swallows are practicing their low, swooping flights every late afternoon, filling the air with their exciting chirps.


Young rabbits, too, are getting more bold.


(side note: ANOTHER TICK)


Our young turkey poults are half grown now!


Our trail cams pick them up quite a bit.


The local fawn is steadier on her legs, too.


This grass-carrying wasp is preparing her nest for eggs.  They take over old insect nests (in this case, a carpenter bee hole) and stuff them with grass to make soft places for the next generation.  


Caterpillars are everywhere, eating quickly to gain mass for pupation.  Here's a black swallowtail butterfly caterpillar on my dill (another excellent reason to plant it):


And a new-to-me one on the milkweed.  These are milkweed tussock moth caterpillars.  They look destructive...


...but they serve a purpose.  Both monarch butterfly and milkweed tussock moth caterpillars rely on milkweed for their larvae, but monarchs prefer new leaves, and tussocks prefer old.  They happily co-exist. Milkweed spreads rapidly, so these tussocks ensure that they are not too widespread.  They eat a few of them, and the sap from the milkweed makes these caterpillars taste very unappealing to predators.  Win win!  

Milkweed really does provide for a vast array of insects, and they are all readying to lay eggs for next year.

red milkweed beetles

milkweed bugs

It really is a wonderful plant to have around!

Well, although we're nearing late (!) summer, there's still plenty of insects around.

cluster fly

wood nymph moth

oleander aphids

agreeable tiger moth

meadow spittlebug

There's so much to see that I've gotten into the habit of carrying my camera when I go outside.  There's only so much summer left!

Well, as seasons end, so do lives.  Borga gave her last WOOF last week.  


She had a good, long life here!  Todd is really going to miss his little companion.


Hopefully these guys will help him feel a little bit better!  It's tough to lose a pet, though.  They really do leave paw prints on your heart.  

(yes, they're on the dining room table...again.)

Have a great week!