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White worms for food

Paul B

NJRC Member
IMO worms are about the best food you can feed along with clams. These foods contain bacteria "That our fish need" to stay healthy along with the fats, minerals and everything else to keep them healthy.
I hear all the time that worms are to hard to keep and they have to be kept cool. No, they don't, they want to be kept in the same temperature you live in. If you live in Death Valley and you have no AC, internet or fresh water, move.

For the rest of you that live on a volcano and the lava laps at your front door,
Can't you get a cheap Styrofoam cooler, put the worms in there with a small freezer pack and change it once a day? Suspend the freezer pack so the worms don't crawl on it. I mean Really! :eek:

Your fish don't really care if you have to go a little out of your way, especially after they were sitting there, or rather floating there, minding their own business and some Jiboni in a canoe listening to RAP music jumped near them with a huge net from Walmart and scooped them up. Ate most of them, sold some to a market that puts them in a can labeled "Dolphin Safe", and threw the rest in a bucket that he hauls gas and salami sandwiches in to a wholesaler where they sit in the sun in a cement tub with floating Toyota tires for a week with no food, then they are put in a bag and shipped over 47 hours to a store where the guy throws them in a small tank and puts a sign on them that reads $49.95, two for $50.00, and no guarantee. :oops:

Then you come along and the guy puts them in a small bag that you keep them in for two hours while you eat at Bonefish Grill. After that you throw them in an observation tank, because they haven't been observed enough, then dip them in insect repellent, tarter sauce and gasoline to remove flukes and flounders. Then quarantine them for 6 months while feeding them expired flakes.
Lady GaGa wears a fluke dress and no one dipped her.
And you have the nerve to complain that you can't find a place to store a couple of worms. :rolleyes:

Then you wonder why you are constantly on the disease forum with sentences that always start out with the word "HELP". :cool:

The worms don't want to freeze, just be at room temperature like 71 or so like I want to live. Where do you guys live? Mars?
My worms are in a Tupperware tub in my workshop. It is hot in there now and I don't see them sweating.
I am fed up to here with excuses. My hand is under my chin. Just get with the program and your fish will live forever with no help from you. Stop bothering them and let them be.

Start a white worm culture. All you need is a Tupperwear tub like your wife stores her underwear in. Remove her underwear and tell her the cat ate them and use the tub. Make some holes in the top in case the worms want to breathe. Put in some wet "potting soil" not top soil, not saw dust, not real dust from your vacuum cleaner, not gravel or sand. Potting soil, preferably without fertilizer. Throw in the starter culture of worms that you Google. Put in half a slice of bread, I use grain bread but I think they would eat your socks. Put some full fatted yogurt on it and wait a couple of weeks. Your neighbors will be so impressed with how many worms you have, and how often your wife has to go and buy new underwear.

Feed them to your fish and they will live for almost 5 days in salt water so mandarins, crabs and almost everything else except pipefish will feast on them. You will never again have to go on a disease thread.


 

diana a

Staff member
NJRC Member
Moderator
As always I enjoyed your post. I am sitting on the beach in Belmar. It’s absolutely beautiful. Not too many BENS here today. :cool: I just placed an order for Enchytraeus albidus.

There is a 90 year old man and his wife sitting near me. He’s has a small speaker and playing Moonlight Serenade ... Since there is nothing to do except people watch, I found this article...

Whiteworms
 

Paul B

NJRC Member
Great article Diana. The beach should be fantastic today. At five AM I was on our beach as I wanted to exercise and it is 167 steps to get down there. i did it twice then I rode my bike. We may go to dinner tonight on the boat.
Enjoy your time on the beach and don't waste time reading about worms. Think of Girly things. :D
 

Mark_C

Staff member
Officer Emeritus
NJRC Member
Moderator
Paul,
Do you rinse yours? IF so, any interesting methods.
I was doing them individually but it would take 9 hours to prep.
 

Paul B

NJRC Member
I don't rinse them to feed them. I do flood the entire container every couple of months to clean out worm poop and eliminate the mites that multiply by the millions. They float so they just wash away in my flooding.
 
I don't rinse them to feed them. I do flood the entire container every couple of months to clean out worm poop and eliminate the mites that multiply by the millions. They float so they just wash away in my flooding.
Love the mite tip. Thanks
 
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