Thursday,

give it a name.

name_NULL111653,

Looks to me like a juvenile Texas Blind Snake. I’m no reptile expert though, can’t tell for sure https://pawb.social/pictrs/image/3f21fd58-801b-41dc-a3a3-1084d88eb058.jpeg

www.reptilefact.com/texas-blind-snake.html

LongMember69,

Horsehair worms?

VizualWarrior,

Yo! I from Phoenix. I lived by some mountains and we’d get baby snakes randomly for a few weeks at a time throughout the year. They look a lot like skinny worms and could range in color from pinkish to dark brown. As to what type of snakes they were, I have no idea.

OldFartPhil,

Did you pick it up, OP? Is it scaly or slimy? If it’s scaly, it may be a Western Threadsnake. If it’s slimy it’s some variety of earthworm.

Bronohomo,

I haven’t picked one up…they are freaking me out. They are about the same diameter as the old iPhone corded earphones…very tiny.

lossykittens,

I hope someone will chime in who’s more knowledgeable but, yeah, it looks like an earthworm to me. Just…longer? Not a sewage worm, by chance?

This site may help you match it: www.trees.com/…/types-of-earthworms

Bronohomo,

At first that’s what I thought…I found tubifex worms image online and thought that was it. I’ve also have a recording of one moving…it kinda glides like it has a lot of legs…but it’s so tiny, I can’t tell if it has legs.

peopleproblems,

Is it "gliding " in a wavy pattern, or in a straight line?

A wavy pattern, where it glides like that makes me think it’s a threadsnake

Bronohomo,

Hmmm…I’ve seen it move more on the wavy side…reminds me of how a centipede moves.

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