I let them out into the garden to be free!

EDIT: This grew locally on my kale in my garden bed, so its native. Also, just found out its a moth and not a butterfly. Whoops!

EDIT 2: Apparently it is a butterfly, a cabbage white butterfly. Also, apparently they are not friendly to kole plants.



by KolorOner

34 Comments

  1. DustyIsGreat

    looks like what a cabbage worm grows up to be

  2. Fantastic-Climate-84

    ##Hey, so, don’t do this, ever.

    Never release an insect that hitched a ride on food into your area.

  3. zatanna77

    It’s a cabbage moth. They are considered garden pests that lay eggs on brassicas. They hatch into worms that eat cabbage leaves.

  4. Unusual-Ad-6550

    It turned in to a cabbage moth. One of the pests that ruin all kole crops to include kale

  5. Downtown_Metal_7837

    Crush that pest.

    Or if you want green worms eating your produce, set it free.

  6. ninat92

    I try to keep my garden completely free from insecticides…. but it is POINTLESS for me to try and plant certain flowers if I don’t spray BT for these buggers. I HATE budworms

  7. AlleriatheHunter

    Tbh I raised 3 of these guys last year, but they’re not good so I just let them be in my house. Had butterfly roommates. Sugar water and flowers everywhere for them. 

  8. Late_Resource_1653

    Not a butterfly, a cabbage moth. They are invasive and destroy kale crops, as well as most cruciferous veggies.

    Feel free to keep as a pet, but if you live anywhere where neighbors or farmers grow vegetables, releasing it would basically be hurting everones gardens and crops.

    It’s really sweet that you wanted to help a living thing, but this is a pest, not a pollinator or friend.

  9. Downtown_Ad6875

    These fellas ate all my brassicas

  10. Alarming-Jaguar

    These evil things lay eggs which result in caterpillars that demolish nasturtiums and plants of the brassica family. Had to constantly check my nasturtiums after finding them trying to demolish them last year.

  11. redditnathaniel

    Reads comments. Lights insect on fire. 

  12. Niftydog1163

    Nope not friendly,  tho cute. I loved feeding them to my chickens.

  13. InevitableDapper5072

    Those bastards are not welkies in my garden

  14. SaltyElephantBouquet

    Just because something laid an egg in your garden and that egg grew into something DOES NOT automatically make that thing native. This is important.

  15. RegionalHardman

    Everyone here talking bout releasing it would cause havoc and whatnot, as if it wouldn’t have become a butterfly in the wild anyway

  16. imawife4life

    Hopefully I never swallowed one of these.

  17. CuteFreakshow

    Destroy that thing. It will eat someone’s kale or cabbage down to the stem.

  18. MrMessofGA

    As for your second edit, yeah, anytime you see a caterpillar on a plant, it’s because they’re eating that plant, but hey! A plant without holes ain’t doing it’s job.

  19. Bad_Chick_FuUp

    Omg! I love bugs so much, I’m so careful not to tell people when I allow the bad ones to live. 😂 I especially don’t go bragging about having cultivated, and releasing them upon the unsuspecting neighborhood. You do you, though girl! 🤣😂❤️ Just kiddin!

  20. RentInside7527

    >This grew locally on my kale in my garden bed, so its native.

    The fact that you find something locally does not mean it’s native. Cabbage moths are native to Europe and Asia, but can be found in North America where they are invasive.

  21. Substantial-Ease567

    If not fren, why fren shaped?

  22. LadyArwen4124

    Ah, some of those decimated my broccoli, lettuce, and brussel sprouts. That’s when I learned to cover my stuff with light weight cloth to prevent critters.

  23. ZeusDaMongoose

    A mayonnaise jar with a stick and a leaf. To recreate what he’s used to. Nice work.

  24. bedbuffaloes

    Okay people, hear me out.

    I am a native plant enthusiast. I grow a ton of native plants to support native insects. Native plants and native insects are important because they support each other, and support other organisms like birds or predatory insects. I am also an organic, regenerative gardener, so I rely on predators to control pests like the cabbage white, and, at least in my garden, they do.

    We plant a lot of non-native brassicas. These brassicas are a host plant for non-native cabbage white butterflies. The butterflies eat this plant, and are in turn, eaten by predators, native insects and birds. The are also pollinators for many native and non native plants.

    So, where exactly is the harm? We are providing a host plant, and an insect that feed many others in the ecosystem (including us).

  25. streachh

    Don’t let people tell you it deserves to die. “Tomato worms” are actually sphinx moths. “Cabbage worms” are actually white butterflies. 

    These insects are a natural part of the ecosystem and deserve to live. If you find them on your plants, simply relocate them to a different plant. You don’t need to go scorched earth on the planet just to grow some food

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