 |
|
4 Weeks Ago
|
#41 (permalink)
|
|
Explaining
|
Not Ranked
:
+0 / -0
0 score
Re: Vermiculture
Quote:
Originally Posted by Michaelangelica
That's terrible 
Do i remember a thread here on soil remediation using plants?
If so, I would like to find it as i heard a guy on the radio saying he could not garden in his inner city terrace because of lead in the soil. (He had it tested).
Would a green manure crop be a good way of kick starting some food for your (future) worms?
|
Yes, I remember seeing the thread on soil remediation a while back. By chemicals, I think they used chemical fertilizers and herbicides, which I'd asked them not to use, because I prefer sparing my little wormies, saving money, and for health's sake. An extra $40 bucks per month is always nice in the recession. Don't think they listened. I noticed on the last two bills that I was charged. Frankly, I'm surprised at how devoid of life the lawn is after several months of their fertilizer and herbicide treatment, and the garden was not terribly great this year.
For green manure, I'll need to get Rhizobium for the white clover. I have seeds. Didn't have a chance this year, but I can. The compost tea I used on my green onions, tomatoes, etc. helped them do better, so I've been collecting tomatoes and greens all summer, but the soil is still hard and clayey. Not soft and pliable as I hoped I could work it into. What would I not give for a few earthworms to take this lifeless dirt and turn it inside out!
My indoor garden has been doing well. Those hydroponic pots I turned into charcoal soil ones are doing much better too. I have started harvesting swiss chard and spinach for salads. 
----------------
Teach a Wall Street banker how to build a fire and he'll be warm for the night. Set a Wall Street banker on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
Logic
The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human misunderstanding.
--Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary
|
|
4 Weeks Ago
|
#42 (permalink)
|
|
Thinking
|
Not Ranked
:
+0 / -0
0 score
Re: Vermiculture
Pretty keen on worms myself.
Got a square metre bin, only a foot deep, that gets about 10 lbs waste per week. This bin is very hard to harvest from I just add all food to one side for a few months then get many pounds at once of worm laden castings from the other side and spread them over the garden patch I'm trying to tweak. I've noticed trees love worms, and get less problems with castings in their mulch.
Paper scraps is good but it seems to attract disproportionate amounts of slugs. As a shredded mulch it fared a lot better, sheets were perfect hiding spots for big bull leopard slugs.
Worms don't eat the food scraps, rather, the biology living on the food scraps. They like bacteria, protists, fungi... If the fungi devour your paper this is a good thing, though I have noticed paper attracts Zygomycetes (moulds) and some of these could be potentially dangerous. Anyone know how to determine this phyla via substrate?
As the worms love the biology they can be encouraged, or scraps processed better, with innoculants. Old finished compost, compost teas, EM, bokashi organic matter, type thing. If you have no worms in your soil the biology is dead, you need compost teas, maybe EM, and organic matter, then the worms will return.
If you have maggots in your pile check and see if you have Hermetia illucens - Black Soldier Flies. These things compost ten times as fast as worms, and their castings are perfect as worm bedding. The maggots they produce are 44% protein by dry weight and can be used directly as chook food or for lizards, carnivorous fish etc. To learn more about BSF....
Black Soldier Fly Blog - Bio-Composting with Black Soldier Fly Grubs – Responsible, Fascinating and Simple
A DIY bin for the beginners is found on page 1.
|
|
4 Weeks Ago
|
#43 (permalink)
|
|
Explaining
|
Not Ranked
:
+0 / -0
0 score
Re: Vermiculture
if your gong the legume route for soil, peas and beans also work. it works really well to grow them int eh compost a little before your spreading it, then the soil is that much more rich. plus you get some nice veg instead of weedy clover (unless you like clover, then by all means!)
----------------
Stephen Robert Irwin: 22 February 1962 – 4 September 2006. Rest In Peace.
Life is not a problem to be solved, it is a mystery to be lived. -Kierkegaard
|
|
3 Weeks Ago
|
#44 (permalink)
|
|
Explaining
|
Not Ranked
:
+0 / -0
0 score
Re: Vermiculture
Quote:
Originally Posted by Getting A Life
Pretty keen on worms myself.
Got a square metre bin, only a foot deep, that gets about 10 lbs waste per week. This bin is very hard to harvest from I just add all food to one side for a few months then get many pounds at once of worm laden castings from the other side and spread them over the garden patch I'm trying to tweak. I've noticed trees love worms, and get less problems with castings in their mulch.
Paper scraps is good but it seems to attract disproportionate amounts of slugs. As a shredded mulch it fared a lot better, sheets were perfect hiding spots for big bull leopard slugs.
Worms don't eat the food scraps, rather, the biology living on the food scraps. They like bacteria, protists, fungi... If the fungi devour your paper this is a good thing, though I have noticed paper attracts Zygomycetes (moulds) and some of these could be potentially dangerous. Anyone know how to determine this phyla via substrate?
As the worms love the biology they can be encouraged, or scraps processed better, with innoculants. Old finished compost, compost teas, EM, bokashi organic matter, type thing. If you have no worms in your soil the biology is dead, you need compost teas, maybe EM, and organic matter, then the worms will return.
|
Is it also the same with topsoil/subsoil and deep burrowing earthworms? That they feed primarily on microflora, although they're more geophageous compared to Eisenia foetida?
Will keep this in mind. 
----------------
Teach a Wall Street banker how to build a fire and he'll be warm for the night. Set a Wall Street banker on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
Logic
The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human misunderstanding.
--Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary
|
|
3 Weeks Ago
|
#45 (permalink)
|
|
Explaining
|
Not Ranked
:
+0 / -0
0 score
Re: Vermiculture
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ganoderma
if your gong the legume route for soil, peas and beans also work. it works really well to grow them int eh compost a little before your spreading it, then the soil is that much more rich. plus you get some nice veg instead of weedy clover (unless you like clover, then by all means!)
|
From what I remember, clovers can be some of the heaviest N fixers and what I've noticed growing clover in my room, it also produces and cycles through a lot of leaves and creates good leaf litter, so it does have an important role in building good topsoil and humus. But...it is invasive, like you mentioned! Either a good or bad thing depending on how you look at it. It can compete with most weeds and suppress them. The white clover in my pots try to branch and find their way into other non-clover pots and it annoys me. In my veggie-producing pots, I switched to sugar snap peas as N fixers with a harvestable crop. Hope to collect several pods in the coming winter.
----------------
Teach a Wall Street banker how to build a fire and he'll be warm for the night. Set a Wall Street banker on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
Logic
The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human misunderstanding.
--Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary
|
|
1 Week Ago
|
#46 (permalink)
|
|
Explaining
|
Not Ranked
:
+0 / -0
0 score
Re: Vermiculture
I saw a little verm crawling about a pile of leaves in the backyard. Maybe there is hope after all. 
----------------
Teach a Wall Street banker how to build a fire and he'll be warm for the night. Set a Wall Street banker on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life.
Logic
The art of thinking and reasoning in strict accordance with the limitations and incapacities of the human misunderstanding.
--Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary
|
|
1 Week Ago
|
#47 (permalink)
|
|
Exploring

Sponsor |
Location: Balloon Boy Land
|
Not Ranked
:
+0 / -0
0 score
Re: Vermiculture
I have a voracious laptop. It's eaten several versions of this post I'd spent a lot of time on. Let's hope it's satisfied and will let me finish one. If you're reading this, then I've somehow succeeded.
I think the thread people are asking about is one I started called Soil remediation. We aren't working on that project right now. We have too many biochar projects at the moment, and we're trying to create an organizational structure within which we can handle all the work that's popping up. If we're able to get back to the superfund site, we'll probably try to get the Worm Man ( Garbage Busters Home) involved. I hope we'll also use
I was an editor on that book, one of many. Another editor, who hired me to assist her, is also part of the community group we're trying to keep together and to engage in the superfund remediation project.
I'm getting very tired. The first couple of attempts were much better than this. Now, I don't care any more. Seeing that cyber petit mal seizure followed by the appearance of the actual post will be my greatest accomplishment in many days. (I lead a very sad life.)
--lemit
----------------
The only second chance we get in life is a chance to make the same mistake twice. --David Mamet
A mind is a terrible thing to close.
Entropy is just nature's way of telling us it's time to slow down.
Last edited by lemit; 1 Week Ago at 07:16 AM..
|
|
 |
|
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
|
|
» Advertisement |
|
|
|