Vermiculture

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Old 05-18-2006
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Arrow Vermiculture

Mmmmm...eizer tock, oder eat zie verms. Better yet, have the worms eat your garbage! Even eat your pet poo if done right.
I have no pets, but I have lawn debris which I usually compost & more recently attempted to convert to charcoal in a solar oven. Enter the worms. Having recently moved I needed to establish a new compost setup & in turning it today I noticed quite a healthy worm population. I have seen shows on verminculture & so now I have established a little worm farm for kitchen scraps in a large plastic planter lined with plastic.
Plenty on the web, just search 'vermiculture'. Here's a link to get you started.
http://www.earth911.org/master.asp?s...ormcompost.asp
Anyone else doing this?

By the by, did you know Charles Darwin's last major work considered the lowly worm in great detail?
http://pages.britishlibrary.net/char...uld/mould.html
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Old 05-18-2006
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Re: Vermiculture

but of course, enlightened one.

I haven't actually gone to the trouble of "adding" worms, but rather they appear.

I mix in the compost and worm castings into the vegetable beds every year or so.
I would like to buy a nice pre-made fabricated device, with bottom trays to simply remove the "end product" without having to dig, and move everything.

Sounds like with Vermiculture and Terra Preta, you have the makings of some seriously killer dirt!

nice link by the by.

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an equal opportunity carnivore
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Old 05-18-2006
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Re: Vermiculture

Even Roman Catholicism had its Diet of Worms, 1521. It choked, followed by a fatwah on Martin Luther. Luther survived to skim the profits of locally franchised vulgate religion. The multi-level sales territory rush was on.
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Old 05-19-2006
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Re: Vermiculture

AAAH! Vermiculture! Green Manure!

This is the most natural and pure way of fixing up good plant chow.

Around here, I've seen this procedure give much more efficiency than any other process!

Truly, earthworms ought to be used on as much a scale as we do silkworms!

PS: Hey Turtle, you make the earthworms seem a little backward.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle
the lowly worm
I mean hey! they have hearts for the first time in the evolutionary family tree!
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Old 05-19-2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by UncleAl
Even Roman Catholicism had its Diet of Worms, 1521. It choked, followed by a fatwah on Martin Luther. Luther survived to skim the profits of locally franchised vulgate religion. The multi-level sales territory rush was on.
I'm in no rush to the Rhine and as a chapman I have little need of a diet. My cousin Johnny favored Swedenborg & Johnny is said to have once thrown away his shoe to punish his foot for having stepped on a worm.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ronthepon
Truly, earthworms ought to be used on as much a scale as we do silkworms!

PS: Hey Turtle, you make the earthworms seem a little backward.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle
the lowly worm
I mean hey! they have hearts for the first time in the evolutionary family tree!
The term 'lowly' in this context I meant to convey a humble condition which is often overlooked for its value.
Many of the articles say the 'red wiggler' variety of worms eats more & reproduces faster than other species. Fo rnow I am going with standard issue earthworms from my yard & compost piles.
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Old 05-19-2006
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Re: Vermiculture

Quote:
Originally Posted by Turtle
The term 'lowly' in this context I meant to convey a humble condition which is often overlooked for its value.
Oh ofcourse. I was joking.

To what extent can vermiculture be carried out? I mean, where ever we have a decent climate, vermiculture works out.

Question is: Why is it not in as much a use as cows, hens, pigs etc are?
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Old 05-19-2006
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ronthepon
Oh ofcourse. I was joking.

To what extent can vermiculture be carried out? I mean, where ever we have a decent climate, vermiculture works out.

Question is: Why is it not in as much a use as cows, hens, pigs etc are?
Oh...it's OK. I often don't get the jokes.
So the extent I think is up to the person. Some of the links show how to make a setup that even can stay indoors in an apartment. I think in climates with very cold Winter the worms must have protection from freezing.
From this link I gave earlier, it says
Quote:
Originally Posted by earth911.org
The rule of thumb for bin size is two square feet of surface area per person, or one square foot of surface area per pound of food waste per week.
http://www.earth911.org/master.asp?s...ormcompost.asp
I do not know of any use of kitchen waste to feed cows or chickens, but pigs yes. Keep in mind in most cities in the US domestic farm animals are not allowed. So far they have not outlawed the worms. ( That is my joke )
Are you going to try this at home? Keep us posted.
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Old 05-19-2006
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Re: Vermiculture

That's a useful link. I might try it out in the remainder of my vacation.
I guess that it should be more efficient in that manner, with the red wrigglers (I don't know where to look for them)

I've just found out that worm compost has been used at quite a good extent around here for a long time. The thing is that climatic conditions do not help the worms a lot. Only recently have we got the resources (almost ∞ water) for keeping the worms alive through the hot summer.

Still, I think that the reason worms are not much used now is that our ancestors never had a chance to figure out the worms worth. Still, we can do that now.
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Old 05-21-2006
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I made multiple & relatively small compost piles to keep things manageable. Today I completely turned & sorted through a near finished pile & harvested over 150 earthworms which I added to my vermitorium (vermitarium? ). Updates to come as the worms turn.
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Old 05-25-2006
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Re: Vermiculture

He He
We got a compost heap when ever i open it to dump the garbage in the lid packed full of literly hundereds of worms and loads of centipedes and wood lice and if i want more worms i just rake the leaf littter out from under the shed and the are hundreds of them. there like theese dwarf hamster some one i know had they have like 5 babies a month they went on holiday came back and poof! at least 50 dwarf hamsters.
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