View Single Post
  #5   Report Post  
Old 01-09-2013, 02:04 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
David in Normandy[_8_] David in Normandy[_8_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: May 2009
Posts: 761
Default Processionary caterpillar

On 01/09/2013 15:00, sacha wrote:
On 2013-09-01 11:03:18 +0000, David Rance said:

In message , Jake
writes

On Sun, 1 Sep 2013 11:26:41 +0100, David Rance
wrote:

I noticed a day or two ago that an oak sapling in my garden was looking
a bit threadbare. This morning I had a good look. The leaves at the top
had been eaten away and, round the trunk a little lower down, were a
couple of dozen caterpillars all huddled together. They were yellow and
black striped, rather like a wasp (which is what I thought they were at
a distance!) and about an inch and a half long.

My wife said that they were the processionary caterpillar but when I
googled for them all that came up was the pine processionary
caterpillar
which seemed quite different in colour. Anyway we took the
precaution of
not handling them (there are severe warnings about what their hairs can
do) and knocked them off into a shovel and put them on our bonfire.

I didn't think to take a photo of them before we destroyed them.


Try this link for info about the Oak Processionary Moth/Caterpillars.
Now's a bit late for their caterpillars I think.

http://www.forestry.gov.uk/oakprocessionarymoth


Thanks for that, Jake. I think that the photos of the processionary
moth show it to be much hairier than ours (I *do* wish now I'd taken a
photo!) and, yes, it does seem to be a bit late for it. But then it's
been a topsy-turvy summer. However the caterpillars commonly mistaken
for the processionary moth still didn't look quite like ours.

David


Any news of the big and beautiful caterpillar that was on your potato
patch?


That was me, not the other David. I've haven't seen anything of it since.

--
David in Normandy.