After watching the birds make a meal of these creepy-crawlers, I get out my bucket, flip my already massive compost pile and snatch up a few of those slimy little fellows for myself, setting them to work eating my food scraps. You see, I'm trying my hand at catch-and-release-vermi-composting or, in layman's terms, I'm catching a bunch of worms, putting them in a bucket and waiting for miracles.
I have two books, Garden Anywhere and The Complete Compost Gardening Guide, that sing the praises of using worms to quickly break down compostable materials (coffee grounds, banana peels, etc). Both books use slightly different approaches so after scanning the pages of each and using some tools around the house I have created a lovely little bucket of worms!
To make your own worm bucket you will need:
A five gallon (or larger) container with a lid
A Shovel-full of Garden Soil or Finished Compost
Enough Newspaper Ripped into strips to fill your bucket half-full
Rubber Gloves (strongly encouraged, I did NOT use gloves which was a mistake)
Drill
corn meal
water
worms
veggie scraps
- Drill some holes along the sides of your bucket so that your worms have room to breathe.
- Rip your newspaper into strips no longer than 3 inches long and wide. Moisten the newspaper pieces and add them to your bucket until it is half full.
- Add your soil and a sprinkling of corn meal and toss everything together. Don't bury the newspaper in soil but use enough to coat the newspaper so that it feels gritty and looks a bit muddy.
- Place the earthworms that you've caught from your yard into the bin. Take veggie and fruit scraps, cut them into small pieces, and bury them under the bedding for your worms. The food for your worms must be buried for easy worm access. Check on your worms' progress every few days by stirring through the bedding and mixing things up (rubber gloves are strongly recommended for this task). Also, make sure that the bin is kept moist but not soggy so that your critters can stay properly hydrated. A sprinkle from a watering can does the trick, as does a spray bottle. When your bucket is teaming with worms, release some of them into your outdoor compost pile or start a second bucket!
- For more info check out: Treehugger.com, Vermicompost.net, and HowStuffWorks.com
miss you guys, in the pit of my poopy-filled soul, is a place that knows we will live near again, soon. canton? charleston? just, keep it in your head, both of you.
ReplyDeleteOh Ry-guy...
ReplyDeleteWe miss you too! Come to Canton and we'll raise goats and chickens!
I can't quite get my head around the idea of using worms for good and not evil. They are creepy & crawly, as you said, and that will never do for StephFace.
ReplyDeleteKudos to you for making them do something productive for you, though! Next up: training mosquitoes to do the dishes!