Flickr Friday: Black Swallowtail
// May 15th, 2009 // No Comments » // Gardening, Photography
I saw three tiny caterpillars on my dill plants one day and thought I’d wait and see how big they got. For a couple of days they stayed tiny and didn’t really do any visible damage to my dill. Then we went away to Austin for two days to go see Damien Jurado in concert, and when we came back they had devoured one whole plant and had moved on to the other two. They had also at least quadrupled in size. It was at this point that I decided to research to see what they were. They are the caterpillars of the black swallowtail butterfly, which as it turns out is very beautiful. Upon researching and finding that they feed on plants from the parsley family (Umbelliferae) , I decided that instead of killing them or leaving them to destroy all of my dill that I would move them to my parsley plants, which were very large and unlikely to see any real damage in the final couple of days of the caterpillar stage of the butterfly’s life cycle. Sure enough, they only stayed on the parsley two more days, molted and let out it’s last big poo or whatever it was, then moved off to find a place to go into it’s chrysalis stage. I’ve not seen any of the chrysalis or any resulting butterflies yet, but I am still hoping.
I would also like to note that this is one of my first opportunities to show off the macro capabilities of my newest lens, the Sigma 18-50mm f2.8 EX DC Macro HSM. I purchased this lens in February because I needed something wide, and I really wanted something that had 2.8 throughout. I have been very impressed with it’s build quality and the quality of the images I have taken with it. It was an added bonus that it is a macro lens.



