
Now I'm not sure what to do with him. Nor what to name him. I took a close-up of his head & claws. He has



I enlarged the photo and was fascinated by his features. The polka dot pattern; the little hairs; the faux eyes; the under the mouth claws to help guide in the leaves; his upper lip that appears to end in teeth.
I feel queazy. And the worst part is that I know he isn't the only one. There must be more where this guy came from.
I've got goose bumps on my arms and I swear I can feel one of them crawling on my neck, under my hair.
Here he's posing on a CD to give you a sense of size. Can you see the claw-hook that sticks out as a dog's tail would, but in this case it is more like a thorn defense found on so many plants.
At first I got him into a paper cup. My first instinct was to run. Then I realized I had to remove this critter from my garden before it ate every leaf & stem. I wrested him into a cup with a chop-stick and sacrificed th tomato branch in the process - he wasn't going to let go! Next - bring the cup that was not coated in green caterpillar blood up to Marc to show him. I left him the cup. Really, I don't know what to do with it!
1 comment:
SHOW NO MERCY! ITS HIM OR THE TOMATOES!!
Also, post some pictures of your veggie patch! I want to see all the Californian bounty please. We have a veritable tomato forest, but no actual tomatoes as yet. We do have rainbow chard, peas, broad beans and we nearly have courgettes (zuchinni)
but I bet yours is doing amazingly with all the californian sun..
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