Hey! I made it into your journal
anonymous
June 11 2007, 02:40:45 UTC
Howdy! Of all the interesting things to learn! How do you know when maggots are fresh? That's intriguing to me. I had no idea maggots had a freshness date. Hell, they eat rotten stuff. How can they be fresh? So, if maggots weren't about to be bait, where along the line of transforming into flies is considered the "fresh" stage? I've only ever used wormies or waxwormies...so I'm trying to take something I don't understand (freshness date on bait maggots) and turn it into something I do understand (the lifecycle of the maggot). Yes, you have me pegged correctly. Definitely interested in maggots. :)
Re: Hey! I made it into your journalmilkmaidJune 12 2007, 19:58:15 UTC
You know they're fresh and freshly fed cause they have a black spot that's rather large. It's the food they'd just eaten, so it shows that they're well taken care of too. I didn't know they could be fresh or whatever. Freshly hatched I think it means. I knew you'd be interested in maggots. 8 ) That's part of the reason I did it. That and I'm just wierdly curious. 8 )
Strange book findsgilbereAugust 4 2007, 13:29:20 UTC
I bought a copy of Rinegold at a steert market in Dublin for E5 later out to find it is valuable and even stranger to findout when I asked my friend Sigmunder if he wanted to read it as he is into his Norse stuff in a big way that his mundane name is Stephen Grundy...
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Yes, you have me pegged correctly. Definitely interested in maggots. :)
Sharlene
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later out to find it is valuable and even stranger to findout when I asked my friend Sigmunder if he wanted to read it as he is into his Norse stuff in a big way that his mundane name is Stephen Grundy...
And he wrote It
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