This video didn't go as planned... sorry you had to see this. In case there are some crazy people that want to support me making more crappy content: patreon.com/Homemade_ecoystems
watch out with those mites. they can crawl out the terrarium and infect all the other animals. you can get hibernastic miles or predatory mites because they eat the bad mites.
I used to breed superworms for my lizards. They don't usually metamorphosize in groups because the other larvae will eat the pupae. I had to put them in their own individual 2oz cups (little plastic condiment cups) and they started transforming into pupae within a week. Try putting individual worms into smaller containers with no food or water source, no substrate, and keep it dark (mine were in shoe boxes). Soon enough, you'll have Darkling Beetles.
Weird... I once did a similar thing like he did in the video with the superworms but I put in like 20~ of them even though they where kind of clumped up most of them still metamorphosized.
I had a similar experience. My isolated worm settled down to metamorphosis pretty quickly. I have also heard that the worms don’t metamorphose in groups due to cannibalism.
Seems like you are triggering them into metamorphosis, forcing them into chrysalids. Absence of resources to accelerate a process, makes sense... because the adult bugs do have wings and will use them to find food further away! So there you will need a lid because those bugs will probably fly! (Which under normal conditions, they don't. Only an occasional wanderer... Indeed thnx for that info. Nice to know it can be accelerated.
The addition of the dramatic hand cam really made me feel like I was a superworm about to be picked up by a mysterious cucumber god. Great artistic expression. Keep it up.
When I was around 8yo I got a pet cricket I loved very much. I fed it every day. One day I discovered a white cricket slid into my cricket's cage and killed it. Only a dried-out exoskeleton remained of my beloved cricket. Of course, I threw the murderer away and mourned the senseless murder. Many years later I found out about moulting. Crickets never get a break. Anyway, those poor creatures' horrible deaths in this video reminded me of poor whitey; and why I try never to pass judgment on issues I'm ignorant about.
I tried doing this previously with superworms for my bearded dragon, and I had the best results by feeding them until they started to get noticeably darker at the tail/head like at the end of your video where it bit you. this usually happens with the fattest super worms which will be most likely to survive the isolation period. It works best to put them into compartmental organizer boxes for stuff like fishing lures/screws/etc, which really restricts their movement space. Once you put them in there, don't give them any food, this will stress them out(or maybe they're just SO bored) which will cause them to go into the curled up position in just a few days, and they will transform much faster. Keep them in there until they transform completely into a beetle and then move them into another enclosure that has a mesh screen floor that sits on top of another box/tray beneath it. I used egg cartons for them to hide/climb on, and threw in random vegetables for food. You might have to adjust their temperature to get them to start laying eggs, but once they start laying eggs, the eggs are small enough that they will fall through the mesh into the box underneath which prevents the beetles from eating the eggs and any newly hatched worms. The eggs are practically invisible and the newly hatched superworms are also barely visible too, so the mesh screen will really help you separate them and allow them to grow without being eaten. If you bother the beetles too much, they put off a smell that I can only describe as similar to burning plastic and garbage. Just thought I'd include that fun fact 😂 For the substrate in the egg receiving box/tray, I had good luck using plain oatmeal or crushed up wheat-thins, and then I'd throw in a couple full sized carrots split in half down their length with the core of the carrot facing downwards into the oatmeal to keep it from drying out too quickly. If the ambient humidity is very low and causing the eggs/worms to die before growing, you can also mix in a small amount of saturated water-crystals that will help raise the humidity and they can also drink from. Hope this helps.
The somewhat depressing part is some sources online claim the beetles the superworms transform into can live for up to 15 years. And, yeah, they need to be isolated or else they generally won’t begin the transformation process.
I tried to have a pet snake once. I ended up with a lot of adult mice, and a hungry snake. Cuz, mice are cute, it turns out, and I'm a bleeding heart sissy. Who knew?
Ok I AM NEVER FEEDING MY ANIMALS LIKE MY future like maybe in a couple months BULLFROG MICE THEYRE TOO CUTE JUST CRICKETS AND MEALWORMS aka the things in the vid bc I’m not feeding it a bird
To be fair, humans aren't any better. The feeder mice given to snakes are treated a lot better than the factory-raised chickens and cows who feed humans
You can get rid of mites by spraying the enclosure with very diluted formic acid. The mites cant handle the acid as well as the insects can and this is also how some ants get rid of mites.
So glad I found this video! I’ve had these specific Darkling beetles as pets for two ish years now. Currently one is pupating and I’ve been waiting MONTHS for it to happen. Here’s some more tips I would suggest! 1- more substrate. These worms LOVE to dig (and create tiny rooms under the soil/substrate to pupate in) so this will help 2- these bugs actually eat meat as well. Chicken, any blood, fish, they are super omnivorous (both worms and beetles) so this will help they grow in size. They’re often found eating the dead bodies of their other fellow worms so you don’t need to remove them! 3- they like dark and damp spaces. More bark and rocks for them to hide under and constant water adjustment works wonders. Dry substrate might be the main reason they’re taking so long 4- worms actually tend to dislike just one type of substrate. A custom mix of a ton of different types of soil will make it easier for them to be at home. I tend to use sand, succulent soil, tropical soil, dead plants, animal bones, and sheep fertiliser for the best results! I hope this helps! Also, please don’t dig around for them if they’re trying to pupate! The more they’re touched (by humans or other worms) delays the process.
I've actually seen this happen in person I actually thought they were genetically engineered to stay as worms before seeing that. It's interesting to see that happen
"Nurture and feed" Hah I have a plastic container from an rotisserie chicken, I put oatmeal in it with the meal worms and some potato slices. I had to go and left this box for 2 months and they STILL survived. Tons of molts. So many worm shells... I wonder if the material is useful. Anyway there were still some living, and surprise hundreds of tiny worms (they must require less water and it must be beneficial for them to not grow quickly, without water available.) So I'm starting fresh with colony and giving them potatoes again. I don't even have a lizard now. Lol I bought them to feed a toad I caught last summer, before I released it.
It is nice you give them a habitat :) Bugs have lives too. I never bothered with crickets. I find they smell funny. I don't like holding them either. I had a leopard gecko as a teen so learned to keep my own worms.
You always sound so chill and that’s what makes me like your videos you sound like nothing wrong happens and I think your a great UA-camr because you care about bugs 🐛 🪳 🐞 and you care about crickets which is crazy but others don’t care so your the best
Also at the end of the video you said “and I suck at making videos” but I don’t think you are trash at making videos I think you are really good at making videos I always enjoy them and your videos are always so great so don’t say bad things about that stuff I care about your videos they are the most amazing videos ever
Saw this post in relation to cricket mites and how to deal with them "Get some mite spray (in the bird section in pet stores), and lay down paper towels under where you have your cricket bin. Spray down the paper towels with the mite spray and then put the fully cleaned cricket bin on top. Mites are a royal pain - stay on top of cleaning your cricket cage and you should be just fine"
I remember one of these guys hod away from my mantis and it Got stuck betwen a net and I named him jery and when jery grow up he escaped and Got eaten shortly after😢
I ran my own personal experiment with super worms, I kept them in an aquarium with only styrofoam as a food source, a large amount made it to adult hood but the conditions weren't good enough for them to reproduce, from what I understand they need to be isolated to layeggs.
I cultivate mealworms / bugs myself, started with that for my frogs, which needed live MOVING food, but since I have no frogs anymore, I feed them to my crayfish, but only the dead ones! Why sacrifice living creatures while I have a lot of dead bugs laying around, old bugs that died of old age and dried out, still full of nutrients? Culture of mealworms is very easy, as showed here, and the bugs are actually quite cute and funny to observe! Very nice that you made a video of these poor underdogs, because they really diserve a space of their own. Good job! Keep up with the dry humour 😂
my mom used to have a mealworm farm and when they turned into beetles we put them on a platform above the mealworms and when they layed eggs the eggs would fall into the meal worms and hatch into mealworms
If I had a nickel for every UA-camr I've seen who makes videos about homemade ecosystems while narrating everything that's happening in a monotone voice with an ambiguously European accent while making extensive use of dry humour, I would have two nickels, which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice.
The Super-worms should be put in separate containers because the larvae with eat the pupae. If the Grain Mites Spread to your house plants the best way to kill them is to spray watered down Dish soap or Bubble Solution on the plants, I don't know exactly why it kills them but it works.
In grade three (Canadurp here) we had to raise some, ‘meal worms’ into their final beetle phase in a former tub of margarine filled with oats. We saw how they pupate and develop. Later on, I was able to identify them in the cornfeed on grandpas farm for the chickens. I was pretty angry that those selfish fuckers were eating the chickens food. Grandpa was chill and explained that the meal worms were like the marshmallows in lucky charms for the chickens. I ate one and realized that he was a bold faced liar.
Those super worms that did not even touch the cucumber must NOT have been THIRSTY! Insects get their water through their food, meal worms and bugs will die of dehydration, the worms and chrysalids will turn black if they don't get enough water, so I provide them popcorn soaked in water (works best for me 🤣) and noticed the bugs drink every day, but not the worms... so yours must have been well fed and very well hydrated, because they didn't even suck on it. When I give them my water soaked popcorn, they all suck on it. Dry popcorn they won't touch, they don't like it, but they love soaked popcorn. For the rest I just give them oatmeal. They have wings but won't fly, so can be kept and bred in an open container. Mealworms and their adult meal bugs are really easy to breed and are a lot of fun!
I raised beetles from superworms. One lived with my Dairy Cow isopods for 2 years. I named him Darkling Duck. Edited to add: I put individual "worms" into one of those individual pill caddies and stuck them in a file cabinet. Much better success rate-- especially if you don't forget about them and find them much, much later while cleaning, all transformed but starved to death in their little coffins. Poor superworms, doomed to terrible fates!
This was hilarious. I've never grown superworms but I've grown mealworms and also the dermestid beetles that come with crickets/roaches/etc. The dermestid beetles take literally zero additional effort if you're already keeping roaches or crickets and they're really useful since they eat organic matter keeping it clean. The larvae are also useful for feeding young/small species of mantids since it's way easier to keep a constant supply of them than of fruit flies. Easier to catch than tiny crickets/roaches and I've also noticed some species seem to be more attracted to the beetle larvae than crickets/roaches (p. Spurca and p. Paradoxa)
This video didn't go as planned... sorry you had to see this.
In case there are some crazy people that want to support me making more crappy content: patreon.com/Homemade_ecoystems
You are literally my favorite UA-camr I love your videos
I really enjoy your videos and love that I get to learn too.
Thank-you for sharing!
You don't make crappy content your videos are 4k quality unlike mine
What country Are you from?
@@victoriawilliams2786 These videos have a unique sense of humor to them that no other channels do!
I will never not love your monotone voice of inner pain
Like Werner hertzog.
"Ew, this on peed on me."
R.I.P. New new bob, he was a hero and a savior for many, he will never be forgotten
After Harambe, it's all downhill
Hear hear!!!
Noooooo!
rip new new bob :(
watch out with those mites. they can crawl out the terrarium and infect all the other animals. you can get hibernastic miles or predatory mites because they eat the bad mites.
Yeah I know, I threw everything those crickets touched away.
@@HomemadeEcosystems That's good. Watch out for eggs. If you threw everyting away then you're fine.
He is a biologist, Im sure he knows :) 5 years of biology paid off, maybe
It's funny how animals can be split in just two categories:
- pests
- animals that deal with pests by eating them 💀
@@vlc-cosplayer Which ones are humans?
I used to breed superworms for my lizards. They don't usually metamorphosize in groups because the other larvae will eat the pupae. I had to put them in their own individual 2oz cups (little plastic condiment cups) and they started transforming into pupae within a week. Try putting individual worms into smaller containers with no food or water source, no substrate, and keep it dark (mine were in shoe boxes). Soon enough, you'll have Darkling Beetles.
Yeah there are 3 isolated but maybe it was because there was still some substrate in there
Weird... I once did a similar thing like he did in the video with the superworms but I put in like 20~ of them even though they where kind of clumped up most of them still metamorphosized.
Nice bro.
Thanks for info.
I had a similar experience. My isolated worm settled down to metamorphosis pretty quickly. I have also heard that the worms don’t metamorphose in groups due to cannibalism.
Seems like you are triggering them into metamorphosis, forcing them into chrysalids. Absence of resources to accelerate a process, makes sense... because the adult bugs do have wings and will use them to find food further away! So there you will need a lid because those bugs will probably fly! (Which under normal conditions, they don't. Only an occasional wanderer...
Indeed thnx for that info. Nice to know it can be accelerated.
"Why am I always patting the substrate?" Because it is a good substrate.
*pats substrate* "that's not going anywhere"
The addition of the dramatic hand cam really made me feel like I was a superworm about to be picked up by a mysterious cucumber god. Great artistic expression. Keep it up.
I had a pet mealworm as a kid. He lived for a year after turning into a darkling beetle! I kept him in a container of oats.
When I was around 8yo I got a pet cricket I loved very much. I fed it every day. One day I discovered a white cricket slid into my cricket's cage and killed it. Only a dried-out exoskeleton remained of my beloved cricket. Of course, I threw the murderer away and mourned the senseless murder.
Many years later I found out about moulting.
Crickets never get a break.
Anyway, those poor creatures' horrible deaths in this video reminded me of poor whitey; and why I try never to pass judgment on issues I'm ignorant about.
Same thing with hamsters.. a lot of them have been buried alive by people that don't know they hibernate...
Ouch!
@@HomemadeEcosystems Do you know why lizards won’t eat the beetles?
I tried doing this previously with superworms for my bearded dragon, and I had the best results by feeding them until they started to get noticeably darker at the tail/head like at the end of your video where it bit you. this usually happens with the fattest super worms which will be most likely to survive the isolation period. It works best to put them into compartmental organizer boxes for stuff like fishing lures/screws/etc, which really restricts their movement space. Once you put them in there, don't give them any food, this will stress them out(or maybe they're just SO bored) which will cause them to go into the curled up position in just a few days, and they will transform much faster.
Keep them in there until they transform completely into a beetle and then move them into another enclosure that has a mesh screen floor that sits on top of another box/tray beneath it. I used egg cartons for them to hide/climb on, and threw in random vegetables for food. You might have to adjust their temperature to get them to start laying eggs, but once they start laying eggs, the eggs are small enough that they will fall through the mesh into the box underneath which prevents the beetles from eating the eggs and any newly hatched worms. The eggs are practically invisible and the newly hatched superworms are also barely visible too, so the mesh screen will really help you separate them and allow them to grow without being eaten.
If you bother the beetles too much, they put off a smell that I can only describe as similar to burning plastic and garbage. Just thought I'd include that fun fact 😂
For the substrate in the egg receiving box/tray, I had good luck using plain oatmeal or crushed up wheat-thins, and then I'd throw in a couple full sized carrots split in half down their length with the core of the carrot facing downwards into the oatmeal to keep it from drying out too quickly. If the ambient humidity is very low and causing the eggs/worms to die before growing, you can also mix in a small amount of saturated water-crystals that will help raise the humidity and they can also drink from.
Hope this helps.
thanks this definitely helps a lot!!
Bro gave us three paragraphs bro and probably 10473927710 words and 104857829492874204927491749194729 letters bro
The growing plant was the real Bob of the video.
Oh, superworm is so excited to be on your wonderful gentle(man) hand, that he couldn't control himself.
Ayo
We call it the "wee of excitement" with our puppy
Learning so much because of these videos like: random bumbs on bugs are not a good sign or that plants grow
Right? That "plants grow" thing blew my mind! Who knew?
The somewhat depressing part is some sources online claim the beetles the superworms transform into can live for up to 15 years. And, yeah, they need to be isolated or else they generally won’t begin the transformation process.
I didn't know that they could live for 15 years! if they end up still transforming I'm building them a real big terrarium
@josefnortje2929 mealworms are a different species. But they look very similar so probably have a similar life cycle
@@HomemadeEcosystems I didn’t know this! Thought they were just well fed meal worms, prevented from transforming. 🙏
Are the cricket mites the same species that infect reptiles?
@@cherylj7460 yes I think so indeed
I think of that music every time i see a solder ant now. How dare you grace us with rememberable content.
Soldier Ant theme took me out 😂. Absolutely love watching these.
I tried to have a pet snake once. I ended up with a lot of adult mice, and a hungry snake. Cuz, mice are cute, it turns out, and I'm a bleeding heart sissy. Who knew?
Yeah I wouldn't be able to do that either. I already feel sorry for crickets 😂
That is the one reason I will never have a pet snake
Ok I AM NEVER FEEDING MY ANIMALS LIKE MY future like maybe in a couple months BULLFROG MICE THEYRE TOO CUTE JUST CRICKETS AND MEALWORMS aka the things in the vid bc I’m not feeding it a bird
Snakes are the best WOOO
To be fair, humans aren't any better. The feeder mice given to snakes are treated a lot better than the factory-raised chickens and cows who feed humans
The pinkies out at the beginning…
Best. Video. Evar.
Pinkies out for New New Bob
Ds out for Harambe
The mites on the face were beyond the bounds of good taste. Can't unsee them.
i've been really stressed out finishing school finals lately, thank you for your silly and relaxing content c:
Good luck with finals!
Who's that -Pokemon- animal?
iiiiiit's *BOB* no doubt.
Yes it is!
@@HomemadeEcosystems
No it's bettle the -b̶o̶o̶b̶- bob
Thank you for clarifying the distance on your hike, I was briefly confused.
“The ones that keep you up in summer” so true 😂😂❤❤
You can get rid of mites by spraying the enclosure with very diluted formic acid. The mites cant handle the acid as well as the insects can and this is also how some ants get rid of mites.
Your dry humour is great.
You remind me a lot of my dad. He makes ecosystems on a slightly larger scale.
This should have more views😭this man dead expression with everything he says just funny somehow
Now i have a new fear that the crickets i buy for my gecko might have mites, gotta check every box now XD
yeah, you have to be careful with that
So glad I found this video! I’ve had these specific Darkling beetles as pets for two ish years now. Currently one is pupating and I’ve been waiting MONTHS for it to happen. Here’s some more tips I would suggest!
1- more substrate. These worms LOVE to dig (and create tiny rooms under the soil/substrate to pupate in) so this will help
2- these bugs actually eat meat as well. Chicken, any blood, fish, they are super omnivorous (both worms and beetles) so this will help they grow in size. They’re often found eating the dead bodies of their other fellow worms so you don’t need to remove them!
3- they like dark and damp spaces. More bark and rocks for them to hide under and constant water adjustment works wonders. Dry substrate might be the main reason they’re taking so long
4- worms actually tend to dislike just one type of substrate. A custom mix of a ton of different types of soil will make it easier for them to be at home. I tend to use sand, succulent soil, tropical soil, dead plants, animal bones, and sheep fertiliser for the best results!
I hope this helps! Also, please don’t dig around for them if they’re trying to pupate! The more they’re touched (by humans or other worms) delays the process.
This helps a lot ! The 3 that I seperated have turned into pupae by now
It helps greatly!
I've actually seen this happen in person
I actually thought they were genetically engineered to stay as worms before seeing that.
It's interesting to see that happen
"Nurture and feed" Hah I have a plastic container from an rotisserie chicken, I put oatmeal in it with the meal worms and some potato slices.
I had to go and left this box for 2 months and they STILL survived. Tons of molts. So many worm shells... I wonder if the material is useful.
Anyway there were still some living, and surprise hundreds of tiny worms (they must require less water and it must be beneficial for them to not grow quickly, without water available.)
So I'm starting fresh with colony and giving them potatoes again.
I don't even have a lizard now. Lol I bought them to feed a toad I caught last summer, before I released it.
It is nice you give them a habitat :)
Bugs have lives too.
I never bothered with crickets. I find they smell funny. I don't like holding them either.
I had a leopard gecko as a teen so learned to keep my own worms.
You always sound so chill and that’s what makes me like your videos you sound like nothing wrong happens and I think your a great UA-camr because you care about bugs 🐛 🪳 🐞 and you care about crickets which is crazy but others don’t care so your the best
Also at the end of the video you said “and I suck at making videos” but I don’t think you are trash at making videos I think you are really good at making videos I always enjoy them and your videos are always so great so don’t say bad things about that stuff I care about your videos they are the most amazing videos ever
Corn meal is about all you need to raise mealworms,, maybe a bit of lettuce of something for moisture.
Any kind of meal will do. I ran out of oatmeal so I started to give them coffee grounds! Any kind of organic (dry) waste, actually, will do the job.
Saw this post in relation to cricket mites and how to deal with them "Get some mite spray (in the bird section in pet stores), and lay down paper towels under where you have your cricket bin. Spray down the paper towels with the mite spray and then put the fully cleaned cricket bin on top. Mites are a royal pain - stay on top of cleaning your cricket cage and you should be just fine"
thanks for the tips!
0:59 heaven
Indeed!
0:44 "WHOS THAT... animal."
now that's some top tier voice acting. such emotion was put into the character.
I know right
1:12 the way you said “ewww this one peed on me” is so funny😂
I love how you changed from kilometers to miles for us Americans
I love how sarcastic you are
I remember one of these guys hod away from my mantis and it Got stuck betwen a net and I named him jery and when jery grow up he escaped and Got eaten shortly after😢
If you'd done this with mealworms, you would have had better luck.
Superworms won't pupate near other superworms... 😅
Yeah the onces that I alone have turned into beetles by now 😁
I once grabbed a few of these beetle transformations for the wild agama lizards. They completely ignored them! They love the super worms.
I ran my own personal experiment with super worms, I kept them in an aquarium with only styrofoam as a food source, a large amount made it to adult hood but the conditions weren't good enough for them to reproduce, from what I understand they need to be isolated to layeggs.
I cultivate mealworms / bugs myself, started with that for my frogs, which needed live MOVING food, but since I have no frogs anymore, I feed them to my crayfish, but only the dead ones! Why sacrifice living creatures while I have a lot of dead bugs laying around, old bugs that died of old age and dried out, still full of nutrients? Culture of mealworms is very easy, as showed here, and the bugs are actually quite cute and funny to observe!
Very nice that you made a video of these poor underdogs, because they really diserve a space of their own. Good job! Keep up with the dry humour 😂
I do the same with my ants, I never live feed them because it is not needed
Soldier Ant returns! 10/10
1:50 The ones that appear on the video are called mealworms, super worms tend to eat slower
The pinky out at the beginning of the video was so fancy it took my breath away 😂
Your deadpan delivery cracks me up 😂
So anticlimactic. Lmfao. I love it
The one that peed on you mysteriously went missing...
Those mites look scary. Nice video!
Homemade Ecosystems, modern-day Lincoln to the crickets and superworms.
1:58 Well that's a first for you.
Definitely need a refund for your "broken worms" 😆
1:12 eeeew this one peed on me
Theres the voice that i have missed❤😂
my mom used to have a mealworm farm and when they turned into beetles we put them on a platform above the mealworms and when they layed eggs the eggs would fall into the meal worms and hatch into mealworms
Absolutely in love with those 💯 jokes said with the most deadpan voice. It layers with the sarcasm like 👩🍳👌✨
2 videos deep and i am heavily invested in this guy's world.
I found my favorite UA-cam channel. Thank you 🩵🪽
Love your personality. This was entertaining and I like how you sidetracked. Loved this
You've promised me Bob. You've delivered Bob, New Bob and New New Bob. 300% promises delivered. Nice.
If I had a nickel for every UA-camr I've seen who makes videos about homemade ecosystems while narrating everything that's happening in a monotone voice with an ambiguously European accent while making extensive use of dry humour, I would have two nickels, which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice.
Life in jars? ?
@@HomemadeEcosystems Yes lol
You are so funny. I love your deadpan delivery.
You outdid yourself this time with the editing. Great job my man!
thanks!
10:52 "and instead of turning into a beautiful butterfly they turn into ugly ass bettles" 🤣
I love Bob.....
Its always getting better and better
“I think my worms are broken” got me
Looking at those crickets gives me chills 😭😭
Ants : were really smart
Baby ants in Singapore : *doesn't even avoid getting stepped on*
MAJOR WORKER SOLDIER !!!!
The Super-worms should be put in separate containers because the larvae with eat the pupae.
If the Grain Mites Spread to your house plants the best way to kill them is to spray watered down Dish soap or Bubble Solution on the plants, I don't know exactly why it kills them but it works.
Thanks for the tips
i have pet mealworms but it took some time for them to become beetles
Dang new video, that’s what’s up
>even Superworms refuse to eat cucumber
Smart larvae.
new bob never to be seen again, honestly new bob might even start his own colony
You win me with soldier ant music, Nice work
It's very strange how the " worms " didn't want to eat that cucumber; it's what they mainly eat.
Yeah indeed, thought it was strange too!
say hi to new Bob for me 3:22
Three cheers for Bob, new Bob, new new Bob (rest in pieces) and Soldier Ant!
You gave them beetle heaven and as such, they felt no rush to grow up
"Ow, that little F---er bit me. I'm done with this video." 🤣
Good to see u again❤
Just binged watched your entire channel. Awesome, loved it and your dry humour. Very funny.
I don't think your worms were broken, i think they just unanimously hated cucumber
In grade three (Canadurp here) we had to raise some, ‘meal worms’ into their final beetle phase in a former tub of margarine filled with oats. We saw how they pupate and develop.
Later on, I was able to identify them in the cornfeed on grandpas farm for the chickens. I was pretty angry that those selfish fuckers were eating the chickens food. Grandpa was chill and explained that the meal worms were like the marshmallows in lucky charms for the chickens.
I ate one and realized that he was a bold faced liar.
😂
This is truth. They (chickens) fought like Raptors for those worms. I didn’t eat my own worm in front of him. He was genuine and I miss him.
Those super worms that did not even touch the cucumber must NOT have been THIRSTY! Insects get their water through their food, meal worms and bugs will die of dehydration, the worms and chrysalids will turn black if they don't get enough water, so I provide them popcorn soaked in water (works best for me 🤣) and noticed the bugs drink every day, but not the worms... so yours must have been well fed and very well hydrated, because they didn't even suck on it. When I give them my water soaked popcorn, they all suck on it. Dry popcorn they won't touch, they don't like it, but they love soaked popcorn. For the rest I just give them oatmeal. They have wings but won't fly, so can be kept and bred in an open container. Mealworms and their adult meal bugs are really easy to breed and are a lot of fun!
This was unreasonably funny well done
Thanks for the metric conversion. For a second I was soooo lost, I thought I'd have to start the video over. 🤨
Actually that's not a superworm that's a mealworm
The darkling beetle they changed into by now disagrees
when i was 9 i used to get like 10 of the biggest mealworms and trow them around in the bathtub until 3 were left. The most alive one was the winner
We had mealworms turn into beetles in our bird food. The crows loved them.
I love your videos, the monotone jokes are exactly my humor
I raised beetles from superworms. One lived with my Dairy Cow isopods for 2 years. I named him Darkling Duck. Edited to add: I put individual "worms" into one of those individual pill caddies and stuck them in a file cabinet. Much better success rate-- especially if you don't forget about them and find them much, much later while cleaning, all transformed but starved to death in their little coffins. Poor superworms, doomed to terrible fates!
Didn't the dairy cows eat him? Those things eat everything
They did not. But I did wonder how he lost a leg a year in.
I just found your channel, and you’re hilarious, plus I love Ants, and lizards.
You don‘t always get sick crickets, I had some who lived a happy life and even had kids😂
this was some okay content
perfect for wasting my life and ruining my sleep schedule over
just what i needed thanks
best description of my content so far: ''okay''
I used to watch you all the time and I never heard you talk this is kind of cool great video by the way
This was hilarious.
I've never grown superworms but I've grown mealworms and also the dermestid beetles that come with crickets/roaches/etc. The dermestid beetles take literally zero additional effort if you're already keeping roaches or crickets and they're really useful since they eat organic matter keeping it clean. The larvae are also useful for feeding young/small species of mantids since it's way easier to keep a constant supply of them than of fruit flies. Easier to catch than tiny crickets/roaches and I've also noticed some species seem to be more attracted to the beetle larvae than crickets/roaches (p. Spurca and p. Paradoxa)
Never heard of those, going to look into them
1:39 blud has broken worms 💀