It's been several years since I had an up-close-and-personal discovery of a TC in the wild. As a child, I used to collect them, much to my mother's horror. I was always particularly pleased when I'd find a blue one, something which occurred in a ratio of approximately 1:100. I know now that the blue ones were a different Malacosoma species, but a tent caterpillar is a tent caterpillar, regardless of its coloration, and not something you want to carry home to your fruit trees. I was rather surprised when I spotted a dozen or so among the salmonberry vines in an area managed by Cowlitz Wildlife today, and I resisted the temptation to fill my pockets with "woolly worms" as I had done so often as a child.
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Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Western Tent Caterpillar, Malacosoma Californicum Pluviale
It's been several years since I had an up-close-and-personal discovery of a TC in the wild. As a child, I used to collect them, much to my mother's horror. I was always particularly pleased when I'd find a blue one, something which occurred in a ratio of approximately 1:100. I know now that the blue ones were a different Malacosoma species, but a tent caterpillar is a tent caterpillar, regardless of its coloration, and not something you want to carry home to your fruit trees. I was rather surprised when I spotted a dozen or so among the salmonberry vines in an area managed by Cowlitz Wildlife today, and I resisted the temptation to fill my pockets with "woolly worms" as I had done so often as a child.
First experience I recall was as a sixth grader, riding the Greyhound Bus to Chicago from Montana & seeing the "tents" for miles & miles outside the bus window on the bushes & trees lining the hiway. It must have been quite something to see as I still remember after all these 60+ years. We have them too here in SL eating the scrub oak. They are awful!!!
ReplyDeleteI hope this isn't the "tip of the iceberg." I would hate to see a resurgence of these critters!
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