What are these things under my pepper plants and sweet potato plant🤢

by Car_1r

21 Comments

  1. simplythere

    Caterpillar frass. You probably have some big hornworms somewhere on those plants. They glow under a black light at night

  2. Comfortable_Use_9536

    I’m pretty sure those Lil turd grenades are from hornworms. Check your peppers!

  3. b_mcclain

    Hornworm poop….Better hurry or your plants will stripped…

  4. gholmom500

    My son finds THWs by listening for them chewing. Really, they are That voracious of eaters.

  5. camderoo

    Awe yes those are the forbidden capers. I Don’t recommend them

  6. TheElusiveHolograph

    Haha, you’ve got a big hornworm in their somewhere. They’ve got good camouflage but when you eventually find it you’ll wonder how you ever missed it and you’ll be shocked at how big it is.

    Edit: also, it’s in your pepper plant, not the sweet potato.

  7. Roachmine2023

    You can use a blacklight to find hornworms at night. They will glow

  8. BunnyButtAcres

    It’s a hornworm somewhere in your peppers. Look for nibbled tender tops of your new growth. They tend to hang on the underside of curved new growth stems. They’re huge and gnarly. I typically just throw them on the ground as hard as I can to kill them. Wild birds take care of the rest.

    They’re also usually directly above the poo balls if you’re still having trouble seeing him.

  9. DryGovernment2786

    Tomato or tobacco hornworm turds. Check your pepper plants and any nearby tomatoes, eggplants, or potatoes because those things can strip all the leaves off a plant very quickly.

    The sweet potatoes should be okay, but if you see holes in the leaves it *could* be a sweet potato hornworm or some other large hawkmoth caterpillar.

    The same caterpillar is unlikely to eat both peppers and sweet potatoes; they are host specific.

  10. NotCambo

    The calm before the storm… you gotta get those guys before they strip all your plants, took 3 of them and 8 hours to strip all my tomato’s

  11. There_Are_No_Gods

    Follow the evidence to the source. If you keep looking at the leaves above where you see these caterpillar droppings, you should be able to trace them back to their current location.

    If you’re like my wife, though, I’m sorry. She famously still couldn’t see a half dozen big fat three inch long tomato horn worms even after they’d eaten every last leaf and were just hanging out in the open on the leafless vines.

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