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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Sun Apr 11, 2010 4:48 pm 
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Location: Western Australia, Perth, mediterranean climate
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We have three worm farms here at the shop that we keep churning all the time as well as one Biopod. I've been pretty happy with how my worm tubes at home are working, they are really chewing through a lot of old fruit and veggie scraps.

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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Thu Apr 15, 2010 9:14 pm 
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I've been running one of those "Can O Worms" for about two years without much success. They were all skinny and small. There are only two of us at home and we do not produce enough waste to keep it going .

Then I read about worms eating the bacteria off composted material more than the waste itself, so I got a bread bag full of old horse manure and put it all in. After a week I decided to see if there was any improvement. They were all tucking in to this stuff and there some mighty fat worms there and there seemed to be a lot more worms. Rabbit droppings have also seemed to work well.

Clive


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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Fri Apr 16, 2010 11:08 am 
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clivedyson@xtra.co.nz wrote:
Then I read about worms eating the bacteria off composted material more than the waste itself, so I got a bread bag full of old horse manure and put it all in. After a week I decided to see if there was any improvement. They were all tucking in to this stuff and there some mighty fat worms there and there seemed to be a lot more worms. Rabbit droppings have also seemed to work well.

Clive


With a family of five we have enough scraps to feed our worms, they did die off a fair bit last winter. I think that was more from neglect though.

I'd also be careful adding horse manure to the worm farm. If the horses have been given a anti-worming treatment it may kill all your worms. At least that's what I've read on other forums.

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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Mon Jun 14, 2010 10:19 pm 
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All the worm juice I've been adding to the garden. Just pour it on straight and stand back. Castings and the juice are the best things I've seen added to a gardens to improve growth. But I will have to work out some way to stop things growing in the worm bins.

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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Sun Jun 20, 2010 8:18 pm 
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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Sun Jun 20, 2010 10:53 pm 
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Location: Perth hills, Western Australia
No photos at the moment, but I run my worms on vege scraps and azolla - they seem to do well as I regularly (i.e 1-3 times week) harvest 30-40 worms out of there to feed the fish. They're just the ones out of the box, so a mixture of Reds and Tigers. I never put meat in there as the BSF get rid of it a lot faster

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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Mon Nov 22, 2010 10:36 pm 
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Location: Kalamunda WA
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I suck with worms!!! My wormfarm just crashed again. It is a can-o-worms and is in shade, a week ago it was cranking and I dumped a whole cellery plant and a few apples in it and just checked today and it has gone all wet and stinky. Celery and apples were still pretty much whole so I pulled them out but my vermipost has gone all wet and smelly and I could only find half a dozen small worms instead of the thousands of big fat ones and little ones that were there last week. I mixed some pea straw through it to try and dry it out and aerate it a bit, maybe it is not to late for those still alive.

What am I doing wrong - what could have casued the crash? I have a layer of hession on top of the active layer with the lid on top of that.

Anyone know the details of the guy in Gosnells who sells buckets of worms for $15? I think I need some more again :confused:


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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Tue Nov 23, 2010 12:29 am 
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:dunno: sorry Burnsy but I never tried the whole worm farm thing, am planning to "borrow" my brothers as it was a thing he had to have (so the olds got one for him) and he used it once then left it out in the sun and they all died.
Maybe its all the moisture from the items you chucked in or that it needs smaller stuff chucked in there :dunno:

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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Tue Nov 23, 2010 8:20 am 
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I've got 3 worm farms and don't do a lot with them. Just chuck stuff in when I remember and drain the juice when I think of it. When I make soil blocks I get the castings from the bottom layer and put the empty tray back on the top. The trays are also good for germinating seeds.

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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Wed Nov 24, 2010 8:19 pm 
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That's about the same as we do duff except we don;t make soil blocks... Minimum care for the worms though....

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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Wed Nov 24, 2010 9:54 pm 
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Location: Kalamunda WA
Location: Kalamunda, WA
Checked them today, can't see any worms :( but mixing some straw through has aerated it and removed the stink.


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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Thu Jan 06, 2011 10:57 am 
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Mine died too, last week :sad2:
Have had them for over 2 years
I think it was the rain and the humidity
Probably drowned and cooked


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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 11:09 am 
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Hey, Chilidude, over on the BYAP forum, you said you made your worm farm from blue barrels. Can you post a pic? :)

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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Tue May 17, 2011 10:24 pm 
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Burnsy wrote:
I suck with worms!!! My wormfarm just crashed again. It is a can-o-worms and is in shade, a week ago it was cranking and I dumped a whole cellery plant and a few apples in it and just checked today and it has gone all wet and stinky. Celery and apples were still pretty much whole so I pulled them out but my vermipost has gone all wet and smelly and I could only find half a dozen small worms instead of the thousands of big fat ones and little ones that were there last week. I mixed some pea straw through it to try and dry it out and aerate it a bit, maybe it is not to late for those still alive.

What am I doing wrong - what could have casued the crash? I have a layer of hession on top of the active layer with the lid on top of that.

Anyone know the details of the guy in Gosnells who sells buckets of worms for $15? I think I need some more again :confused:


Your worms might have migrated to a drier or more aerobic area of the box. If they're still there, it should be temporary. Remember, the worms are actually after the bacteria, and it takes a bit for the bacteria to start breaking down the waste and multiplying, especially if you add a lot at one time. I have three decent sized worm beds (old wood missile shipping boxes that I put hinges on). I usually add about two gallons worth of kitchen scrapes every 3-5 days, and I just bury it next to the previous pile. I always make sure it's well covered with bedding (usually shredded news paper) to avoid any stench. Some stuff will appear to "stay fresh" in the bin for quite awhile. I attribute this to the cool, moist nature of a worm bin. I pulled out some lettuce that was going to seed and buried it in one of my bins two weeks ago and it still looks almost as fresh as it was when I pulled it out of the garden. Chopping or shredding material before introducing it into the bin will hasten the decomposition. Like I said though, I have three good sized bins, so instead of shredding material, I just alternate which bins I feed when I need to dump the bucket of kitchen waste. Having a small bin will make it more sensitive to temperature and over feeding, but my bins have been pretty bomb proof and low maintenance. I just harvested about 11 cubic feet of worm castings out of my two smaller bins. It might not sound like a whole lot, but it goes pretty far.


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 Post subject: Re: Compost Worms
PostPosted: Tue Jun 07, 2011 2:49 pm 
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Location: Kalamunda WA
Location: Kalamunda, WA
My worms are cranking again since a visit to Mitch and a look at his farm. I have adopted his method of pouring water through the farm every few days and it is not only giving me heaps of nice leachate, the flushing keeps the worm bed nice and fresh. The worms love it.

I take my leachate from the farm by the bucket and tip it into a 200 litre stink barrel where it is diluted by tap water and mixed with compost tea. This gets poured by the bucket onto my fruit trees and into my wicking beds which makes everything happy :joy:


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