I’m standing in my front yard, holding the noodle strainer over the
bushes in front of my living room window. I’ve found a long, flat piece
of bark, and am using that to gently, gently prod the moth along.
“Come
on, buddy,” I mutter as I nudge him. Her? The moth is beautiful, white
with black spots, but it’s got a snub-nosed head and an orange striped
thorax beneath the spotted wings and looks almost aggressive,Save up to
80% off Ceramic Tile and porcelaintiles. so … “him.”
On
the third careful push, the moth gets moving, and starts walking along
the inside of the sieve. I rotate the bowl, quickly, and tilt it, trying
to get the moth to move to the lip, and to the leaves beyond.
This
moment has been over six weeks in the making. It was April 14 when I
moved the empty mulch bag and found the remarkable caterpillar
underneath. I had never seen anything like it -- striped smooth red
alternating with prickly black -- and I scooped the caterpillar up, took
it inside,Choose from our large selection of cableties, and made it a little home in a glass vase. I added some leaves and set it on the kitchen table.
I
didn’t intend to keep the caterpillar forever, just long enough to
identify what kind of butterfly it was going to be. But once I looked up
a caterpillar guide online, it was beautiful! A Giant Leopard Moth! No
way was I going to let it go! I had to see it through its whole
metamorphosis.
Of course, I’ve never cared for a caterpillar before,Why does moulds
grow in homes or buildings? and couldn’t find much information on how
to take care of it. So I guessed. I replaced varied dead leaves with
varied fresh leaves very few days. I dripped in a little bit of water.
And
I disregarded my friends’ and family’s skepticism. People would walk
into the kitchen, peer inside the unusual centerpiece, and shrug. My son
and husband looked at each other, eyebrows raised, and silently agreed,
“Crazy Mom,” more than once.
Things did not improve as the
weeks went on. “Look! It formed its chrysalis!” I exclaimed one day. But
the casual observer couldn’t see the chrysalis by looking into the
vase; only I saw it, by dumping the whole matted clump into my hand and
gently peeling apart stuck-together leaves.
After finding the
chrysalis, I changed my tactics. I left it alone, I stopped replacing
leaves, kept dripping in water. The old leaves turned brown and droopy.
Fuzzy white mold grew along one side.
I believed the caterpillar
was dead. Everyone believed the caterpillar was dead. It had to be,
right? No signs of life, for almost four weeks. Mold. Brown leaves. I
was just days away from dumping the whole mess out on the lawn, when
today, I came home, happened to glance in the vase,Home ownership
options with buy mosaic. and, “Oh!” There he was! Pure white, with black spots, gripping the inside of the vase.
I danced around the kitchen, thrilled to see the moth. Thrilled that I hadn’t killed him. Thrilled by his beauty.
And
now, outside, the moth, on the lip of the strainer, finds the leaves,
reaches out, crawls down, follows the branch,This is a really pretty
round stonemosaic
votive that has been covered with vintage china . and in an instant
disappears from view. I spread the branches, peek down, and try to catch
a last glimpse.
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