The Perils Of Privatisation - Part X
News4 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by upceltic67. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's OK, it's not the plague -- relax, Andy.
It sounds like either weevils, mealworms, or another beetle. There are various kinds which feed on stored dry food. Their grubs eat their way through it, hatch into beetles again, which then breed and so it goes. They are not usually a health risk, just distasteful, and of course they do eventually spoil the food. There are some moths which do much the same.
Weevils are the reason why sailors traditionally knocked their ship's biscuit on the table before eating it -- thus of course missing out on some good protein.
Weevils are a couple of mm long, the roundish grubs often making little houses in dried lentils etc. Mealworms are a bit under an inch long, straw-coloured and shiny, with six tiny legs at the front. The beetles are long and brown.
Maggots are fly grubs (soft, whitish, no legs at all, just a dark head), and (depending on species) need food such as fruit, meat or other quite soggy stuff. Unless your wheatgerm has got very wet it can't be maggots.
cont...