Friday, March 5, 2010

The Very Hungry Caterpillar Retold in Pictures




Caterpillar and cherry tomato

Caterpillar gutting a cherry tomato


There are few who don’t know Eric Carle’s children’s classic, The Very Hungry Caterpillar, about the cheeky green caterpillar who eats through anything in its path – from an apple, pears, plums and strawberries, to oranges, cake, ice cream and even cheese. We’ve taken a look at what caterpillars really eat and have come back with some astonishing if not astonishingly cute results.


Caterpillar going for a whole cabbage:


Caterpillar and cabbage



As plant eaters or herbivores, caterpillars really could not digest cake, ice cream or cheese of course and some caterpillar species only feed on a very narrow selection of plants. However, most caterpillars are known to be voracious eaters of all things green and are therefore not always welcome in a garden.


The very hungry caterpillars we have followed confirm this; they eat through berries, flowers, plant pods, cabbage and even tomatoes. But see for yourself what the real-life very hungry caterpillar has been up to:


On the first day, the very hungry caterpillar ate a hole into a rosebud:

Rosebud


On the second day, the very woolly caterpillar ate two red berries:


Berries


On the third day, the very hungry caterpillar went into the lilacs:

Lilacs



On the fourth day, the very spiky caterpillar chomped on a daisy:

Daisy




On the fifth day, the very silvery caterpillar ate a wildflower called Indian paintbrush:

Indian paintbrush



On the sixth day, the Monarch caterpillar ate a pretty pink flower bud:

Flower bud



… a swan plant seed pod:

Swan plant



… some butterfly weed:

Butterfly weed


… and the flower bud of a Mexican Milkweed plant:

Mexican Milkweed



Last, it ate through a whole Milkweed leaf for digestion:

Milkweed leaf



On the seventh day, the now not so hungry caterpillar had a drop of water:

Water



Then it rested before building a cocoon around itself:

Cocoon


It stayed there for a few days and then…


…emerged as a beautiful Tortoiseshell butterfly:

Small Tortoiseshell butterfly

Buzz It

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