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But right now, my red wrigglers are fine pets for a city life.
They're poor, living off wrigglers they find in the mudflats south of town.
Their nontechnical name is "wrigglers," and that's exactly what they were doing.
But these wrigglers were now in my house.
It has a flatter head than most other wrigglers.
To the thick wrigglers she added a goodly portion of soil.
Then, I placed dinner in one corner of the bin, filled it with damp bedding, and let out my wrigglers.
Recently metamorphosed individuals have also been seen enter to shallow water to capture mosquito wrigglers.
You'd think the wrigglers would be appreciative.
What is needed are lots of lively wrigglers.'
The dolphin had added that native marine life was swarming to the surface, fighting over the drowning wrigglers.
Japan wrigglers are tiny and clear.
It moves by wriggling, like other wrigglers.
They're a bunch of liars and wrigglers.
A pound of them - which could mean 600 to 2,500 wrigglers, depending on how many babies and adults there are (but who's counting?)
After hatching, the insects go through a 5- to 10-day larval stage (during which they're called "wrigglers" because of their motion in the water).
The Wrigglers were black and spindly.
What comes back are floaters and wrigglers and squirmers, none bigger than a little finger.
The zand rushed to obey, catching the wrigglers.
"The crawlers crawled, the wrigglers rigged.
Wrigglers can refer to:
"So when the little wrigglers come up and try to attach to the surface to breathe, they sink instead," Mr. Lachut said.
And do not toss out fishing worms or red wrigglers by throwing them on the ground or in a pond (they do not drown).
Collared Wrigglers are perciform fishes in the family Xenisthmidae.
All the little insects and flies and small wrigglers, the occasional flights of wild wherries who nested in the heavier bushes were silent.