Shall I just share the wealth, or will they have a knock on effect on the health of my plant for next year?

by Norman_Small_Esquire

11 Comments

  1. kditdotdotdot

    To be honest I let the caterpillars feast on all of my plants. Although the roses have another couple of months of flowering to go I think this will be okay.

    After all, we can’t enjoy butterflies without caterpillars can we?

  2. Mr_Flibbles_ESQ

    After a certain point I just leave my plants and let nature do its thing.

    Those guys need just as much help as some of us.

    Leave them to it I say.

  3. MauroAguero

    yeah, i let them do whatever they want, that’s a great boost for the soil

  4. Prestigious-Garbage5

    That one leaf must be super tasty.

  5. alltheways7522

    Yes I let them go on mine these days. These will grow up to be saw fly, a kind of stingless waspy insect, they are pollinators and voracious aphid eaters!

  6. sherpyderpa

    Yep, let em be. Your roses will survive these.

  7. Norman_Small_Esquire

    Thanks for your input guys. I’m going to let them stay.

  8. They were all over a willow tree volunteer that is almost 6ft, they skeletonize the leaves and the tree just put out more small leaves. I leave them just knowing more about our ecosystems. My mother and her mother would go nuclear on them. They’d also salt the soil where weeds grew. So I choose to be different. My willow looks absolutely fine.

  9. Theprettydamned

    Sawfly larvae! They totally destroyed my gooseberries last year. Less of a problem this year, and my gooseberries recovered brilliantly.

    One of those pests that have good years and bad years. I don’t worry too much. Roses are hard to kill.

  10. AdditionalAardvark56

    Made me smile, yes let the Bluetits feast on them.

  11. PoppyStaff

    They’re not caterpillars. They’re sawfly and they’re utter pests.

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