it is a Lime Hawk Moth originating from England
Not a Hawkmoth, this is a swallowtail butterfly caterpillar.
milkweed
I dk, im looking it up right now cuz i just found one too.
I saw this caterpillar too. I cannot find it anywhere online. The x mark on the rear end was very distinctive. I would love to know what kind it it.
City of Caterpillar ended in 2003.
The American Dagger Moth's caterpillar is fuzzy and yellow with what looks like black spikes. But a closer look shows it is just fuzz.
Many types of caterpillars have long antennae coming out of the head and the rear end. These include the wooly caterpillar.
A green, hairless caterpillar with two white eye markings, two white side stripes, and yellow tail can be a number of larval stage possibilities in the butterfly and moth world. Each caterpillar additionally goes through a number of instars (color-changing developmental stages) which may not resemble what comes before or after. Some examples include coppers, elfins, emperors, hairstreaks, ringlets, roadside-skippers, skipperlings, skippers, sulphurs, whites, wood-nymphs, and yellows.
The horn for the 1997 Ford Escort Lx is located underneath the front end of the car. You'll have to crawl under the car face up or if you can lift the car up to see the horn. (It looks kind of like a snail shell or that kind of basic shape.)
It is not a caterpillar -- it is the larvae of a June beetle: "June beetle larvae are easy to identify because they crawl upside down on their backs with their feet upward." Source: Darrell Blackwelder, Salisbury Post, September 25, 2009.
Opposite symmetry LOL :)
A caterpillar that is green with a black spike at the end of its tail is the Puss Moth. They can be found in willow trees.