Monday, December 28, 2009

Do you want a working Pet... try a worm farm

Did you undergo that worms will eat organic matter 3 to 4 times quicker than your backyard composter?... and shelter a lot less effort?

It is simple, absolute costs nothing to run at all, it is not time consuming, and you rap make lots of extraordinarily integrated routine fertilizer free, that won't burn your lawn or busted up your plants if you free lunch too much like the commercial products.

A major standard of your kitchen scorched is organic, and should not be thrown out, but kept and recycled with your new worm pets!. Worms will eat just about situation that was once vital. That includes: leaves, grass clippings, weeds, all sorts of household entree scraps, natural fiber cloth, all sorts of manure (including unsightly besides horsewhip waste) chargeless products, and prone human hair.

Worm castings, are what you get after the worms have distilled their "dinner". substantial is humongous Natures best routine fertilizer. You smartly evolution onto your garden beds, and lawns, and flower pots, with no worries about using too much.. .

Did you know that 2000 composting worms, can turn into 8000 worms ropes 6 months?.. all you proclivity are some simple kit again containers, and unfeigned angelic well runs itself, you just ravenousness to make sure and grit them your food scraps etc, further they will be happy manifest campers.

Worm farms are also ideal for businesses, its a great place for employees to get rid of their handout and lunch scraps. The castings answerability then be used dominion planters and beds etc, what a great way to keep integrated the food scraps visible of the dumps, as we do not tend to gain composters at work..

Worm farming is also important for balcony gardens in apartments, as there is NO smell, no rotting garbage smell, the worms process the scraps quickly, further you responsibility produce quite a lot of castings owing to your balcony planter pots.

There are exhaustive kinds of great instructions and ebooks outmost there on worm farming, but a cluster of people admit it will express messy and stinky, which is not the case. This is a great way over you to succour with the environment, and do your part to aliment our world green. Give it a try and get some more information...

Friday, December 25, 2009

Worm Farms

Compost worms are amongst our favourite backyard buddies, as they turn our household food scraps into 'black gold. Worm castings are phenomenal soil improvers. We spread worm castings over the veggies beds, and around our fruit trees from the base of the trunk to well past the drip line. They're much better than any other animal manure. And they have no smell, which keeps the neighbours on side!


Can of Worms

We found a great system to start out with is the 'can of worms.' This worm home is a system of trays, shown in the picture above. You feed your worms in the top tray, and harvest castings from the lower trays.


Bathtub System

To get the worm castings really cranking, worm houses made from old bathtubs are the way to go. We set ours up on a frame for easy access.

To make sure our wormies don't go walkabout, or drown, we put a 5cm layer of gravel at the bottom of the tub. Over the top of the gravel, we put a weed matt and some washed river sand to make sure there is no mixing between the valuable worm castings and the gravel.

Ventilation and aeration is critical. Wormies need to be able to breathe easy! One way we increased air flow was by cutting 6 slits in the bottom of the tub. We also have gaps between the tub and the lid, to allow oxygen to pass across the top of the worm farm, but still keep out excess water during heavy rains. And we areate the worm bed whenever we feed the worms, or add water to the system, by lightly 'fluffing' the material in the bed with our hands or a trowel.


Wednesday, December 23, 2009

All About Farming And Food Production

Green care farming is a fast growing business and the demand after such services has increased over the past five years. Approximately 1 500 farms offer Care services and the number is anticipated to increase further. Green iguanas, not surprisingly, are green in colour, but can be found in many different shades ranging from bright green, to a dull, greyish-green. Their skin is rough, with a set of pointy scales along the iguana's back.

Feed containing small wild-caught fish also contains the pollutants in those fish, and they accumulate up the food chain. Because farmed fish eat only their pellets instead of the wider variety of food that wild fish encounter, they could be getting a larger dose. Feeding organic waste to worms gives people an effective and easy way to turn food scraps into a rich fertiliser.

Adding worm casts or worm tea (liquid produced in the composting process) to the soil promotes soil fertility, moisture retention, and encourages plant growth. Feed and miscellaneous supplies alone will require $1,500 or more annually an investment all told of $5,000 or more, exclusive of land and dwelling.

Nitrogen and phosphate uptake is poor in iodine-deficient soils. When the soil is acidic or turns alkaline through heavy applications of line, deficiencies of zinc, manganese, boron, iodine and other elements develop because these become less soluble in water. Nitrogen is a crucial plant nutrient but can cause large problems in excessive doses. In the 1970s and 80s the water quality in rivers and lakes started deteriorating.

Fish farming is essential in increasing protein intake to these communities.

Fish escapement and the transfer of disease from farms to the marine environment are other serious concerns. In British Columbia on Canada's West Coast, more than one million fish are estimated to have escaped from net cages since the early 1980s.

Fish feed on plankton and other hydrobios. Pond fertilization lies in cultivation of various food organisms and their propagation in large quantities in fish ponds to provide fish with abundant natural feeds, by which they can grow faster.

Fish meal and fish oil, used by the salmon farming industry as pellets to feed their farmed stock, is both depleted and contaminated. Salmon farmers are caught between a rock and a hard place -- between the devil and the deep blue sea.

Production-oriented agriculturalists argue that environmental protection--especially protection of forests and topsoil--can be advanced through modern, input-intensive farming. Environmental advocates, by contrast, associate high-input farming with chemical pollution, a faster exhaustion of water supplies, and a dangerous loss of biodiversity.

Production is now concentrated in California and the Carolinas, but after 12 years of research to develop culturing techniques, Kohler and zoologist Robert Sheehan believe the fish is ideal for cultivation in southern Illinois.

Production and cultivation are central in this innovative concept. While some canopy items might simply be collected and harvested, the cultivation of selected species offers the best opportunities for utilisation on a sustainable basis.

Growers often till the land as many as 3-6 times during a growing season to "eradicate" weeds and prevent reseeding before they start farming organically -- a "deal with it now and not worry about it in future" approach. This practice results in high levels of soil erosion and subsequent loss of organic matter from the fragile Florida soils. Growing food accounts for only one fifth of this. The other four fifths is used to move, process, package, sell, and store food after it leaves the farm.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Guide to worm composting - COLLECTING FINISHED WORM CASTINGS FROM WORM COMPOSTING BINS

After feeding your worms for 3-6 months, you have noticed the bedding has been eaten, and you may now begging harvesting the brown, crumbly worm compost. Whenever you are harvesting the compost and adding fresh bedding at least twice a year is necessary to keep your worms stay healthy. The bedding will be noticeably darker with your worms’ castings. After 2 and a half months have been passed, there will still few of the original beddings is still visible in the bin plus brown and earthly looking worm castings. Although our food waste is being added regularly, the bedding volume will be gradually decreased.

METHOD 1:

You should move the contents that you use at your worm bin to one side place the fresh bedding in a empty space and bury your food wastes there for a month/so. Harvest the other side after the worms you have migrated to the new food and bedding.

METHOD 2:

You have to remove one third to one half of the given contents of your worm composting bin, worms and all and add the worm compost to your garden soul. Add the fresh bedding and food to your worm bin.



METHOD 3:

Spread a sheet of plastic under a bright light of the sun. Dump your contents of the worm box into a number of the piles on the sheet. The worms will crawl away from the light into the center of each pile. You can brush away the worm compost on the outside by the hand.

“SOME FUSS” HERVESTING

Some of the worm composting can involves moving the finished compost over to the one side of the bin. Placing the new bedding in the space created, and placing our food waste in the new bedding the worms will be gradually move over to the fresh bedding and food waste. The finished compost can be harvested

“MORE FUSS” MAINTENANCE

If you want to use all of the compost at once, dump the bin’s entire into a large plastic sheet and that can make piles of the materials. You can use the sunshine or a hundred watt light bulb to drive the worms to the under of the piles. Worms don’t like bright light because the single cells on the epidermis that reacts to the light. Scoop off the tops of each pile until all you have left is the worms in your composting bin.

USING YOUR WORM COMPOST:

Your worm compost is more concentrated rather the most composts it's because the worms great at digesting your food wastes breaking them under into a simple plant nutrients so you should use its sparingly for you to get the best results.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Growing Organic Worms To Help Your Garden

The main work worms do in your garden is tilling and aerating the soil. They burrow very deep, leaving channels through the soil that break up clods and allow air to enter and water to penetrate and drain away.
In the process of eating at the surface and eliminating lower down, they introduce organic matter to the deeper levels and steadily increase the depth of topsoil. Their main role is to digest decomposing organic matter, converting it quickly into a form plants can use as nutrients.
It is important to maintain good soil structure when gardening organically. Unlike mechanical tillers, earthworms do not damage the soil by inverting it, creating hardpans or breaking up the crumb structure. They never have mechanical breakdowns, they do not create noise or pollution, and they use garbage for fuel - an excellent way to dispose of your kitchen scraps, especially if you live in an apartment.

DIY Worm Farming
Commercial worm farms are very practical, widely available, easy to use and are quite aesthetically pleasing. You usually buy them with a small supply of worms to get you started. Choose either Red Worms or Tiger Worms. However, if you already have a suitable 'home' for your worms you don't need to spend the extra money.

A pair of old concrete laundry tubs in a shady spot near your kitchen door or close to your propagating area (or both) is ideal. Have the tubs elevated to make collection of the fertilizer easy. Leave the plugs out and put a strainer in the hole so that any excess water can drain.
Fill the first tub with compost and mix in a handful of dolomite or agricultural lime, along with about a half a bucket of soil. Place a bucket under the plug-hole and water this mix with a fine spray until it is quite saturated and starting to drip into your bucket.
Tip in your starter population of worms and cover the surface with an old hessian sack, wet cardboard, old carpet or similar. Worms usually live underground so they thrive in an environment that is cool, dark and moist. You can purchase a tub of 500 - 1000 worms to get started. They are available from professional worm breeders and can be sent through the mail. Many garden supply centres will also have them.
A close-fitting solid lid on your farm will suffocate your worms, so you need to fit a fly-mesh or shade-cloth screened lid to keep out flies and other insects.
For the first month you need do nothing except make sure the farm is kept quite moist, but not awash. Once the farm is settled in you should not need to add extra water. If your farm is exposed to rain, make sure the plug is left out or your worms will drown.
The compost itself will feed the worms for quite a long time, but to get maximum breeding it is best to add some supplementary feed every few days, especially as the population starts to increase. Add a dessert-spoon-full of lime or dolomite to each kilo of food.

You can vary their feed by rotating between:
- a bucket half-filled with water and cow or horse manure, mixed to a slop and poured over the surface;
- a blender filled with household scraps(not citrus or onion peel or meat) blended to a slop and poured over the surface;
- rotten potatoes, pumpkin or fruit, just placed on the surface;
- half a bucketful of new compost, spread over the surface.

Worms also like:
• soaked and ripped pizza boxes
• shredded and soaked cardboard, paper
• leaves, dirt, hair, egg shells
Worms do not have teeth, so scraps should be cut into small pieces - waste from a vegetable juicer is ideal.
Plants from the onion family (including garlic, leeks and shallots) and citrus fruits contain volatile oils. If any of these are included in the food scraps the worms will climb out of their housing to get away from the smell.
Within a few months the tub should be filled with a writhing mass of worms, and it's time to colonise the second tub.

Half-fill the second tub with the same mixture of compost, lime and soil. Put a strainer in the plug-hole and water the mixture until saturated.
Burrow down to the plug-hole in the first tub and put in the plug. Set a hose to just dribbling into the first tub until it is half-full, being VERY careful not to forget it and fill it right up. Leave the hessian on top to exclude light. The worms in your first tub will all migrate into the top half to avoid drowning.
Scoop them out and, reserving some to put in the garden, transfer them to the second tub. Let the plug out of the first tub and drain into a bucket. You are left with a bucket full of very, very rich liquid fertilizer and a tub half full of worm castings.
From now on you should be able to repeat this process every month or so, transferring about a third of the worms out into your garden or feeding them to the chooks each time. This will also ensure that you always have a supply of excellent liquid fertilizer available as well as the rich worm castings. Your plants will thrive!

Thursday, December 17, 2009

E-books – How to Market the Worm Farm

If your business is selling information there are somethings that you need to consider when you make the move to online business development and product delivery. This article tries to shine a light on the facets of online information sales that may be overlooked at first. Selling information online has a number of benefits there is no physical packaging and handling to worry about and no issues of having a product in stock. For the customer there is no waiting for a delivery or a delay in receiving their goods after the sale is completed.

So, you have decided to sell information online and want to present it in eBook format, what does this entail. Plain text could be used but it leaves a lot to be desired or go on Customers paying for information have an expectation that the information will be presented in a format that reflects the thought that has gone into it. A plain text document has the look of something that was rushed out the door.

EBooks also provide features such as bookmarking, highlighting, searching, etc. Do you want to provide your customers a format that is mainly aimed at producing hardcopy (Adobe PDF) or crossplatform display? PDF files
are an option when you are willing to let the purchaser print out the material and is a very professional looking solution.

The problem with PDF files is that they have hard copy as the intended primary destination and they are not well suited to viewing on small size screens. This is where certain eBook formats really shine.

Ideally a eBook format will automatically reformat the document to be viewable on different size and resolution devices while keeping inline formatting intact. There are many different eBook formats to choose from but not all are equally viable for commercial redistribution of content. Along with the ability to view on different size small screens, it is also desirable to be able to view the document on a fullsize PC display and make use of the extra screen realestate.

Do you want to handle the sales and delivery of your eBook yourself or would you like a outside company to take care of those issues for you and just leave you with the job of marketing your eBook. Handling the sales on your own gives you a lot more flexibility but takes up considerable effort and finances (to handle credit cards, PayPal, etc.) to get going.

There is one company & eBook format that can handle these issues out of the box Mob Pocket. Broad platform support including most smart phones, PDAs, and PCs the same eBook file will display properly formatted on all these devices
Books are based on the Open eBook standard and are a subset of the HTML markup language Ability to import from various formats including HTML and MS Word Many free books are available in Mob Pocket format which you can then bundle in as sales closers

Retail eBook sales through a large number of affiliate online stores requires no work on your part. Free eBook reader application. Purchased books are encrypted and may only be read by the eBook purchaser. Minimum retail price is $2 Funds can be in US$ or Euros. Once you have gotten a Publisher account (free) and the eBook publisher software you can upload your books to the Mob Pocket server and all the financial & distribution tasks will be taken care of for you. Just take care of the marketing and pointing potential customers at the detail page for your eBook. Make the description text for your eBook catchy you may get sales from people who are just browsing and never thought to search for your eBook.

The sales of your eBook will pay you the wholesale price that you have set and which is 50% of the retail price. This means that you have to take into account how much you want to make on each sale vs. how much you want to charge people for your eBook. If you want to make $10 per sale then you must price your eBook at $20 which might cost too much and drive away potential sales. Its up to you

Monday, December 14, 2009

Ebooks - Marketing The Worm Farm

Ebook distribution can be a combination of personal passion with a hint of marketing basics. The Internet is filled with knowledge consumers. No other time in history has made it so easy to investigate issues once relegated to professors or other experts in their field.

Consumers can go online every day and access the latest in customized news stories, sports, weather and then access an online encyclopedia to learn more about the first guy that played the Maytag Repairman in commercials or the current shortstop for the Chicago Cubs.

Each consumer has a differing idea of what constitutes good knowledge. For instance you should not assume a knowledge-based consumer would be disinterested in learning more about worm farming simply because it is a niche market.

The truth is the Internet may be the perfect location to market your knowledge-based ebook.

Let's follow this logically. In the village, town or city where you live you are the only worm farmer you know. You haven't had anyone ask how to start or manage a worm farm so you draw a conclusion that infers no one is interested in worm farming.

In a municipality fifty miles down the road there is a couple interested in what it takes to develop a worm farm. You could help them, but they don't know you - and you don't know them.

Now, you could live a happy life managing your worm farm or you could help others get started in the business of worm farming through an ebook filled with your experiences in the field.

The end result is you suddenly have access to a worldwide audience who may seek you out because they can't find material suited to the establishment of a worm farm anywhere else.

Your work may not be a best seller, but it can work to drive visitors to your site and can assist them in learning more about something you excel at.

The knowledge-based ebook can be a marketing tool to help motivated knowledge consumers locate your site and check out the variety of information, products and services you may be able to offer.

Information is a tremendous commodity and remains a strong benefit to website owner and visitor alike.

The world of publishing is at your fingertips. There is no longer a need to find a traditional publisher because ebooks bring the world of publishing to you. In most cases the largest investment you will make in the development of an ebook is your own personal time. In the end, your customers may be very grateful you took the time to share what you know.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Do You Want a Working Pet... Try a Worm Farm

Did you know that worms will eat organic matter 3 to 4 times quicker than your backyard composter?... and with a lot less effort?

It is simple, it costs nothing to run at all, it is not time consuming, and you can make lots of very organic natural fertilizer free, that won't burn your lawn
or hurt your plants if you use too much like the commercial products.

A major part of your kitchen
waste is organic, and should not be thrown out, but kept and recycled with your new worm pets!. Worms will eat just about anything that was once living. That includes: leaves, grass clippings, weeds, all sorts of household food scraps, natural fiber cloth, all sorts of manure (including dog and cat waste) paper products, and even human hair.

Worm castings, are what you get after the worms have processed their "dinner". It is Mother Natures best natural fertilizer. You simply spread onto your garden beds, and lawns, and flower pots, with no worries about using too much.. .

Did you know that 2000 composting worms, can turn into 8000 worms in 6 months?.. all you need are some simple tools and containers, and it pretty well runs itself, you just need to make sure and feed them your food scraps etc, and they will be happy little campers.

Worm farms are also ideal for businesses, its a great place for employees to get rid of their food and lunch scraps. The castings can then be used in planters and beds etc, what a great way to keep all the food scraps out of the dumps, as we do not tend to use composters at work..

Worm farming is also great for balcony gardens in apartments, as there is NO smell, no rotting garbage smell, the worms process the scraps quickly, and you can produce quite a lot of castings for your balcony planter pots.

There are all kinds of great instructions and ebooks out there on worm farming, but a lot of people think it will be messy and stinky, which is not the case. This is a great way for you to help with the environment, and do your part to keep our world green. Give it a try and get some more information... how to make a worm farm

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Quick Guide to Raising Worms

Raising worms or worm farming - quick guide

Why would someone be interested in raising worms or worm farming? If you are at all concerned about the earth and your environment, worm farming is a great opportunity for giving back to mother earth. First of, you don't have to burn your organic waste and pollute the air. Second, you fertilize the earth and give plants a better environment to live and grow in. If you have vegetables in your garden, and fertilize the ground they live in, you will have a huge increase in the outcome.

What you need to know to get started:

What happens in a worm farm?

-- The worms and microorganisms breakdown the organic wastes by eating it and in the other end comes the material you can use as a fertilizer.

What worms to use?

-- When you are raising worms indoor you can not use regular soil worms(earthworms) for composting. They cannot survive in that environment (unless it is open to the surrounding soil and outdoor)

-- For indoor or closed composting you have to use special worms that do not dig deep into the ground. Surface worms is the way to go.

-- You can use E. fetida include: red worm, red wiggler, brandling worm, manure worm, tiger worm or Lumbricus rubellus.

How much waste can they process?

-- When you first start out, you have to give the worms a couple of months to adjust to your environment. In this time they produce less, about 1/4 of their entire weight each day (1 pound = 1/4 lb per day)

-- When you are up and running you should be able to process about 1/2 of the worms total weight a day (1 pound of worms = 1/2 lb waste per

What about the climate in the compost?

-- You should try and keep the moisture content on about 80-90% and ad fresh air as well. It is most important when raising worms.

What to compost?

-- Use only fruit and vegetable waste...also add crushed egg shells every now and again.

What do the worms cost?

-- It depends on the type of worm, but typically 1 lb (1000 worms) is $15 - $40.Justify Full

Raising worms can be a great hobby for your kids as well. It is easy to do and the children just love to get their hands in the ground. Kids need to learn about nature and how to protect it. This is a very affordable and fun way to learn.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Compost Worms

If you've decided to start a worm farm, you need to know a little about worms.

The first thing is that you can't use the worms from your garden. The garden worms live in dirt and do not adapt well to a worm farm.

You need to get specific compost worms. You can usually buy them from the hardware store where you bought your worm bin. You can also get them from other worm farmers or from commercial worm farmers. Maybe you have some friends with worm farms. They could give you some to start with.

The most common types of worms for worm farming are Red Wrigglers, Tiger Worms, Indian Blue worms. These varieties are all compost worms, and will thrive on your food scraps. They are top dwellers who live in the top 6 inches of bedding material. They can eat their body weight in scraps each day.

Compost worms eat dead, decayed vegetable matter. You can find them in manure heaps. They don't eat fresh food so all the food scraps you feed them will have begun to rot before the worms start to eat them. If you want to speed up the process, you can place food scraps into a plastic container for a week or two before feeding them to the worms. The process of decomposition should be well started by then.

The quantity of worms you need is about 1 kg of worms for every 500g of food waste. When you add food scraps, you should bury them into the bedding material so they don't attract flies.

Do not use meat, dairy, orange or onion scraps because they can make your worm farm smell unpleasant and attract flies and other unwanted pests.

The worms like a moist but not wet bed. It will smell bad if it is saturated. You should have a tap at the bottom to release excess water and worm waste. Drain off the excess moisture and do not add any more until the smell has gone.

If you find your worm farm still smells unpleasant you are probably overfilling it. Wait until most of the scraps have decomposed or been eaten before adding any more.

Worms are useful and fun. You are helping the environment by disposing of your waste responsibly. You may even find you enjoy farming worms and scale it up a bit. You can breed them quite easily and you don't need a lot of time or equipment. They are a great project for kids, educational, environmentally efficient and fun.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Gardening and Composting - Healing the Earth and the Self

Agriculture has always been part of man's life. Any form of agriculture, big or small, benefits the earth. Plants provide food, protection from the extreme weathers, wood for building, cleans the air by taking in carbon dioxide and converting it into oxygen for us to breathe. All of us should try to do the little that we can to contribute to the greening of the planet.

I love nature and that is why I love gardening and composting. It is lovely to see how a garden grows from almost nothing to sculptured plants and flowers, along with any material we like placed in exact positions. My garden has several elephant sculptures alongside the many plants and river stones.

It is indeed wonderful to dig into the earth and feel the soil in my hands, and the plants do appreciate being pampered. Finding earthworms is a delight. It is a sign that the soil is in good condition and I know my plants are healthy. I move my plants around in the garden now and again. Many of them are more than five years old as I have been maintaining the garden for ten years now. Birds come by each day to find food in the garden. Squirrels come by too but they often scurry away when there is movement.

Some six to nine months ago, my husband got me started on composting and worm forming. We collect horse dung from a nearby equestrian club and prepare it for the worms with our bare hands. Fortunately horse dung is not really smelly, just rich in fibre. We only have to bear with the urine smell which goes away after a couple of days. Worms are really nice to touch. They feel cool and soft as they crawl and wriggle around. We now have 3 batches of fat worms. We keep them well fed with vegetable and fruit cuttings as well as egg shells.

When the compost is broken down after a few months, the fine organic fertilizer is used to condition my potted plants. Else, we just add on more horse dung and kitchen organic waste so that the worms can continue to thrive.

I am rather proud of my little garden and often, I sit at the patio, enjoying the view, feeling the breeze and listening to the birds chirping nearby. It is so relaxing to work on the garden and to appreciate the outcome of gardening.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Thinking of Starting a Worm Farm

Are you thinking of starting your own worm farm but don't know where to begin? I had the same problem when I started so I got detailed information from the experts.

I had so many questions like:

Where to keep a compost bin? What about the smell? How hard are they make?

I had so many questions that I thought would be laughed at.

But, I found out I wasn't alone.

I learned that the compost bins are simple to make, convenient, and easily maintained. You can use Styrofoam, plastic or wood. The size of the container is entirely up to you. Nothing like a leaky container to clean up after so, you have to make sure it's water tight. The amount of space required will depend on the amount of worms you plan to grow.

You can start your own business of producing nightcrawlers and pure earthworm castings.

Or you can choose to just do your part to help save the planet! A part time operation will grow 15,000 worms & 5,200 lbs of casting per month. You can do this in a basement, garage or a spare room since there are no offensive odors. More worm growers are wanted primarily because of the potential demand for the product.

Believe it or not worm farming is a serious business!

Not only are the nightcrawlers themselves sold, but their worm castings are also marketed as a top-quality organic fertilizer. There are growing concerns about health problems due to usage of chemical fertilizers and pesticides so organic growing methods are becoming increasingly popular.

Worms are an integral part of our ecosystem, and one whose value has never been more important.

In the face of global warming, more and more individuals are taking responsibility for their own recycling and food production efforts.

From neighborhood gardens to backyard compost piles, people everywhere are finding that getting out of doors and into the dirt is the first great way to start giving back to the planet.

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Worm Farming Business

Just how profitable is a worm farming business?? Most worm farms are started in order to get the product that the worms produce when fed organic material. This final product is called castings, and while it's technically worm excrement, it's also a great fertilizer or additive for garden soil or potted plants.

Using worms to process compost and create castings is 'vermicomposting', and the finished product is called vermicompost or vermicast. To get high quality castings from an earthworm farm, it's necessary to start with the proper type of worms. There are certain types of worms that like to living in a container and process organic waste. The wrong type of worm may burrow down and will not process much of the food into castings. If you're just beginning, you'd want to buy your worms from an experienced vermicomposting supplier.

Grow the farm in a container. Start by putting some sheets of shredded newspaper to serve as bedding, followed by a few handfuls of soil. Moisten lightly with water. Add some organic waste for food, and then the worms. Cover with something that will keep out the light while retaining moisture, such as burlap or newspaper. After a couple of weeks, take off the cover and add some more food. Continue to do this as the worms multiply. If the worm farm starts to smell bad, you may be supplying the worms with more food than they can process. Also, be sure not to add any animal products, milk products, or oils, as food, since they can all smell or attract pests.

When the bin is about half full, it's probably a good time to harvest the castings. There are a number of ways to harvest the castings. Many people just push everything to one side, being sure to pull out any large pieces of non decomposed food. They then add the bedding, dirt, and food to the empty side, and wait a couple of weeks for the worms to move over to the new side, leaving rich vermicompost which they can then remove and use in the garden.

The worm casting compost or the worms themselves can be sold via the Internet and create a profitable, low labor business for the entrepreneur.

The final product is called castings, and while it's technically worm excrement, it's also a great fertilizer or additive for garden soil or potted plants.

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Worm Farms - How to Make Your Home a Little Greener

By now you have probably noticed a "green" trend in the world. It seems that everywhere you turn there is a new environmentally friendly option from paper towels to makeup. It's a trend that is helping the world...fortunately.

So, what can you do to make the world a less wasteful place. One answer is to start a worm farm. Disgusting sounding? Perhaps. Environmentally friendly? Definitely. You see, worms are able to decompose food scraps, paper products, or other kitchen waste into a useful compost that can be used in gardens, flower beds, lawns, etc. What this means, is that instead of filling up your wastebasket and hence your local landfill with stinky waste, you can feed your worms and produce a highly desirable fertilizer that can be used in many ways.

The process that worms process food and other waste into a useful product is called vermicomposting. The resulting compost is known for its high nutrient contents and how well it helps plants grow in a natural (environmentally friendly) manner.

So, you might be asking yourself. Yeah, sounds great, but where do I keep my worms? That's the best part about it. You can actually have your very own worm farm inside your kitchen. There are specially made worm bins that keep the light levels, moisture, oxygen, and other factors that keep your worms healthy. These worm bins can go in place of your garbage can, under your kitchen sink, on the counter, or just about anywhere in a very non-intrusive fashion.

Or if you decide that you want to get a little more serious about worm farming, you can make your own large scale bins out of wood, plastic, or even metal. In fact, worms don't just help reduce the waste that your own household produces, but it can also be a profitable venture.

Because of the many benefits that worms pr.oduce, they are highly sought after. So, you could get into the business of selling your worms. Red wrigglers in particular sell very well, and they multiple quite rapidly all on their own! All you have to do is continually feed them your food scraps. In addition, you will have to make sure that the light levels, moisture, oxygen, and food beds are all properly maintained.

The by product (vermicompost) is also highly marketable. So, whether you decide that you would like to have your own small worm farm, or whether you want to produce worms and worm compost on a large scale, its up to you. Both have a very good market potential. And most importantly, you will have added a way in which you can keep your house a little "greener".

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Worm Farming And How To Get Started

If you have always wanted to start a worm farm but don't have the essential information on how to get going, then don't worry. Getting started in worm farming is not complex, and certainly not rocket science.

You may have many reasons for wanting to set up a worm farm. For example, you may be interested in the fertilizer rich in nutrients produced by the worms, or if you are considering a constant supply of live bait or live food for exotic pets.

Whatever be the reason, you need to set up a bin. The foremost thing to look upon is the container. To calculate an appropriate size, you need to measure the quantity of waste you are going to require to use for feeding. The depth of the container should be at least 6 to 12 inches. Wooden boxes or a plastic tote is considered to be ideal material as a container.

After deciding the containers dimensions, you should prepare it for use. For use, the holes must be punched or drilled through the top of the container for permitting the air flow. Generally for this, two methods can be applied.

One method is to drill holes in to the bottom of the container to permit sufficient water and other liquids to drain off. Another method is to install a spout at the bottom of the container. When the liquid starts to fill up, the spout is turned on in order to release the fluid. While using the spout, you also need to top raise the shelf a little bit. The raised shelf may be made up of slats having various holes for permitting the liquids to drain in to the container's bottom.

Once the container is ready, check the bedding materials. You can make bedding using shredded or soaked newspapers, dampened leaves and cardboard. Don't use colored pages. And be careful not to drown the worms. You just need to keep the bedding moist, not soaked. No matter what the bedding material is, a small quantity of soil should always be mixed in. The best types of bedding for worms is covered in more detail at http://www.wormfarmworld.com

The container must be placed in an area which ensures optimal conditions. The temperature should be between 72 to 75 degrees Fahrenheit. The placement of the bin should be in an area having access to rain water.

Once the bin has been constructed and bedding has been added in a perfect location, then add worms to it.

This is the way to start your own worm farm. Gather some information regarding the addition of useful and appropriate worms for your farm. Red worms are supposedly the best for worm farms but its best to research on this before finalizing a decision. Undoubtedly, worm farming is beneficial whether it is done as a hobby or for a profit.

So getting started in worm farming is really simple. You just have to follow the above-mentioned procedure. Once started, you should know how to sustain the quality by regularly maintaining the worm farm. Good luck with your worm farm!

Monday, November 9, 2009

Who Benefits from Worm Farming

Worms have been a goodness to mankind and nature long before insect job became well-known. Worms wage food for another animals, support create and reassert healthy soil and plants, enhance husbandry efforts, wage fish bait, and support teach our children about pets and another valuable lessons.

Worm farms are a conception of uncolored science. A nature museum or a zoo would goodness from a small insect farm as a display and to support take the animals kept there, as substantially as keeping the scene bright and fresh because of the benefits to the earth. A petting zoo could attain a insect farm conception of their hands-on attraction. You might move a insect farm as a science project with a class or with your possess child. It would also attain a good FFA project. A small husbandry edifice may poverty to invest in insect farming.

A person who raises birds could move a insect farm or buy from a insect farm to wage treats for their birds. Pet shops could buy from insect farms to take their fish or reptiles. Parents could goodness from a insect farm as a artefact to teach their teen children about recycling, their prototypal pets, compassion, the uncolored food chain, gardening, and about business.

Worm farms are a artefact to support the economy by purchase and selling. They wage a useful service by crescendo the health of soil, they wage a useful product, and they encourage equipment sales. They increase the income of the supplies needed to reassert the farms. They wage an player income for the vender as substantially as jobs for some workers needed on the bigger farms.

Catfish farms would goodness from insect farms by play their possess or purchase from one for their fish food. Fishermen goodness from insect farms by using uncolored resources to fish to support keep down the income of artificial lures, which cause player trash along and in rivers, lakes, and ponds.

People who run chicken houses would goodness from insect farms because of the large amounts of food the chickens need.

So, who benefits from insect farms? We all can. Even if you never touch a worm, you still eat vegetables or production that come from the plants produced in the soil that worms helped attain healthy! Gardeners have famous the benefits for years because of the benefits to their compost piles and the results of their flower beds or vegetable gardens.

Worm farms crapper support a person open up conversations, which creates more acquaintances and doable friendships. They crapper alter grouping together who are nature lovers, fishermen/women, gardeners, recyclers, teachers, and even playing owners.

People crapper see to attitude the hard-working little worms even if they never quite get over their squeamish reactions to them. Many worms are nature's friend. For those who aren't squeamish, worms crapper even be an foreign treat. They are well-known in another lands as a source of human food. Then again, many of us found discover as children taking dares that eating a insect is a fun artefact to gross discover our peers!

Thursday, November 5, 2009

What Do You Know most Worm Farming?

If you hit wondered how popular or widespread insect farming is in the United States, or if you hit ever thought of starting your possess insect farm, you haw find the following aggregation interesting.

Worm farms on a large scale exist as follows: Arizona, Connecticut, New York, Oregon, South Carolina, Michigan, Montana, New Mexico-1 each. Florida, Massachusetts, Missouri, and the United Kingdom-2 each. Pennsylvania, Texas-3 each. Canada and Washington-4 each. California-15. Of course, there are many that aren't listed as major farms. Many grouping hit their possess backyard insect farms.

Any business, including insect farming, module verify from 3 to 5 years normally to break even after their initial assets and fix costs. It's essential to be careful with your purchases and to do your investigate before jumping into any business. Careful consideration means a better chance of netting profits sooner.

What do you undergo most lineage stock? You can find beatific lineage stock in a city gardener's basement supply just as substantially as you can from any established breeder with the same type of worm. It isn't unusual for someone to essay to sell lineage stock at an increased price in any animal business. The population can verify as daylong as 90 life to threefold no concern where you buy your lineage stock.

How many worms you should start with depends on several things. How such can you afford? How bounteous do you poverty your insect farm? How such space do you hit now? Are you finance as a second income, for a lowercase incurvature money, or are you hoping to acquire into a bounteous insect farm? Can you armour your worms from temperature changes? Will you be willing and able to ship your worms elsewhere for selling?

Some helpful aggregation to undergo is:

1. Worms are huffy to pressure changes in weather. Finding them in the lid of your insect containerful before it rains is no reason to panic.

2. Ants module be more likely to enter your insect bins if the bedding is dry or highly acidic. Raise the moisture noesis or keep the legs of your stand in a container of water. You could essay applying petroleum jelly around the legs or adding whatever garden lime near the ant gathering spot.

3. Cover your firm insect food with the grime in the bed or lay a layer of wet newspaper over it to get rid of acetum flies. If you verify your worms likewise such for them to closing apiece day, it module invite the lowercase flies, too.

4. A smelly insect containerful is a sign that you haw be feeding your worms likewise such for them to digest quickly. Stir the waste gently to earmark air flow and space for the worms to travel more easily and verify less. It haw verify a lowercase research to figure out how such your worms can process efficiently. The turn module modify as the worms multiply.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Know More on Worm Farming

Some grouping ask, “Why in the world would I want to have a insect farm? There are plenty of another useful farms that sell vegetables, fruits, animals, and eggs. What beatific is a insect farm?” Well, it's an understandable reaction. After all, it's commonly the stilly grouping in society that go unnoticed; so why shouldn't there be stilly creatures that go unnoticed? People underestimate the value of the worm.

It's true that there are worms that do alteration to crops, animals, and people. Worms in your intestinal grouping are best flourishing out. That's why dogs and cats, modify horses and cows receive insect treatments. These worms are taking away nutritional values the animals requirement to survive.

What about the beatific worms? The first activity to a insect is, “Ewww, gross.” Or, “Is that a snake?” Well, understanding anything is the key to appreciating it more. No, a insect is not a snake. The beatific worms are not poisonous and have positive benefits that are not readily seen. They're hard-working little creatures and deserve our respect.

So, what are beatific worms? Earthworms, compost worms, and fishing worms are beatific worms. Earthworms are institute in rich soil. If your plants are flourishing and growing, chances are there are earthworms down there toiling away to help attain this happen. Those die-hard fishermen crapper verify you about the benefits of a good, fruitful fishing worm! Catfish and bream are two of the type of fish that enjoy worms. Let's not block the flourishing birds that flock to your yard to sing and play for you and your children or husband. These birds take more than just the cum in your feeder, which is a beatific abstract since the cum will separate out and be forgotten by the well-meaning providers. That's where the worms come in to take up your slack!

People farm worms for useful reasons. But there are also reasons most grouping can't accept in general society yet. Worms crapper be great matter for people. Mealworms, earthworms, grub worms, butterworms, and tomato horn worms are all edible. There are restaurants in Singapore that substance worms as a meal choice. Worms are eaten in Thailand, Mexico, Australia, Africa, Asia, and South America. People who are disagreeable to survive in the wild, like our military soldiers, are taught to take worms as a maker of protein. They're low in fat, too.

Although grouping may not readily take worms in America, insect farms crapper still wage a maker of foreign matter for those who do. The worms crapper also be shipped to another places, but the temperature has to be correct so they'll live during shipment and upon arrival.

Worm farms crapper also display primary matter called “hornworm chow”, meal, and flours for ingest in cooking breads and cakes. Hornworm chow is sold as a powder for about $10 per 1/2 pound to take about 85 worms to adulthood. This chow also take chameleons.

So, as you crapper wager insect farms are primary and understanding them crapper be interesting and helpful.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

All About Worm Farming

Worm job is a great artifact to course compost waste and another discarded materials. As a result, nutrient rich grime is produced and crapper be used in flower beds, crops, and gardens. Regardless of all the reading and research digit does, issues may hap and crapper drive some concern.

Here are a some of the commonly reported questions and issues with insect farms.

Smell

It is ofttimes thought by some that a smelly insect farm is normal. In fact, it is not. If worms are kept in an appropriate environment, they module not smell. If the farm has an odor, the most likely drive is overfeeding.

Material to be composted is settled on the crowning layer of grime for the worms to consume. If likewise much is given to the worms, it crapper begin to rot feat a build up of bacteria within the walls of the insect farm. This is the drive of the smell.

To remedy the situation, simply discontinue feeding of the worms until any uneaten material is gone. The grime should also be stirred for aeration and to allow the worms to advise more freely.

Bugs and another pests

Using a container with a tight lid crapper support preclude some pests from infesting the insect farm but some are sneaky sufficiency to make it in regardless. Small vinegar flies are ofttimes a complaint among insect farmers. This identify of control is of no harm to the insect farm but typically is a result of overfeeding. Large flies appear when there is an abundance of food.

Ants are also a common issue. If ants are seen in the insect farm, the chances are pretty good that the grime is likewise dry. Adding water to the grime to increase the moisture crapper support eliminate ants. If using a insect farm that stands on legs, simply apply some petroleum jelly to the legs to preclude the ants from being able to climb up.

Maggots crapper be found in insect farms where meat is offered to the worms. The prizewinning scenario is to eliminate meat from the diet altogether. If maggots hit made their artefact into the insect farm, they crapper be eliminated by placing a milk soaked piece of clams into the farm; the maggots module be worn to it and crapper simply be removed.

Worms leave the farm

This topic leaves it up to the insect farmer to figure discover what the difficulty is and mend it. If a insect is leaving, he is unhappy with his surround and is in see of a more suitable one. Worms module escape for reasons such as the grime being likewise parched or there isn't sufficiency food. On the another hand, grime that is likewise wet could also be affecting the worms, feat them to want to leave.

The maker of the difficulty should either be eliminated or fixed. If the grime is likewise dry, fresh water should be added to the farm. If it is likewise wet, the excess should be exhausted and new substance should replace the old. Locate the drive of the excess moisture and eliminate it.

Ensure that the worms are getting sufficiency matter and the farm is in a location where the temperature module rest constant.

Feeding

There may be some fault on what to feed worms. Appropriate foods to feed include fruits, vegetables, foodstuff shells, greens, tea bags and coffee grounds and filters. Non-food items crapper also be fed to the worms and include soaked cardboard, paper products, cotton rags, leaves, dirt and hair.

More important are the items that should not be fed. Dairy products, meat, citrus, onions and garden waste that has been treated with chemicals are all things to avoid in a insect farm.

These are meet a some of the common topics when it comes to insect farming. Although they are pretty easy to tending for, it is important to realize the think for some of the changes or issues detected within the insect farm. Problems should be rectified early to preclude the expiration of the worms.

Providing a proper environment, correct food, appropriate moisture level and temperature module support ensure a supply of happy and flourishing worms.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Right Worms for Your Worm Farm

Worm employ is done for individual reasons. Composting, the production of nutrient rich grime and providing springy bait are three of the most common reasons for insect farming. Some worms do a better employ at their duties than others so it is important to undergo how to choose the right worms for your insect farm.

Composting is one common reason for insect farming. Worms are utilized to compost waste and discarded material naturally and without adding to the local landfills. To do this, the worms eat fruit and vegetable scraps, along with other compostable items much as paper products, leaves, cotton rags and egg shells.

If composting is the primary reason for setting up a insect farm, choices should be prefabricated for the pertinent types of worms that are famous as being the prizewinning for this option. The Red Wiggler, or Eisenia fetida, is reportedly the prizewinning insect for composting. These worms reproduce easily and are extremely hardy. The trait that makes them prizewinning as compost worms is their esurient appetites.

Because of their eagerness to devour anything edible, Red Wigglers produce a high caliber substance resulting in nutrient rich grime that is so desirable with insect farming.

Perhaps upbringing worms for the purpose of providing springy bait is the content of a insect farm. Bait crapper be upraised for individualized use or modify supplied to local fisherman finished bait and tackle shops. The prizewinning worms for this purpose are the dweller Night Crawlers. These worms crapper be utilizd for baiting fish in every types of conditions, modify in saltwater.

The dweller Night crawler is reportable to be one of the hardiest fish available for insect farming. They crapper also be utilized as a springy matter source for another animals much as birds, reptiles, exotic pets and aquarium fish. They crapper be utilized in a composting type insect farm but work prizewinning as springy matter and bait. Night Crawlers are pronto available and have similar care requirements as the Red Wigglers.

Worms utilizd for garden and lawn employ are typically available in sets of three different varieties of worms. The Red Wiggler and the Night Crawlers are of times two of the types of worms in these sets. The third insect is usually Pheritema, or Florida Wiggler which are worms that burrow deep into the soil.

Over 3000 varieties of worms exist. The worms mentioned here are the most commonly utilized and pronto available on the market today. They crapper be institute at various online distributors. Local insect farmers crapper be institute finished online directories or by hunting up the topic in the local telephone book.

Most types of worms are typically prefabricated available as adult worms, young worms and egg capsules. Typically sold by the pound, the number of worms per organization will depart depending on their geezer hood and size. Egg capsules yield a higher number of worms per organization once hatched.

A insect farm will be most successful when the pertinent insect is chosen for the employ at hand. While most worms will compost discarded items and waste and act as springy bait, some have some diminutive traits that make them the prizewinning choice for a insect farm with a particular purpose.

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Worm Farming Predators

It may seem humorous that the very animals you may produce your worms for would also be the predators you have to protect your insect farm from. If you just give the worms away to the predators, there isn't much point in trying to raise them for profit by commerce them to the people or businesses that use them to feed the very aforementioned types of predators!

You staleness ready other things from harming your insect farm, of course. One of those things is the drug residue that is left in the scatter you may intend from livestock farms to feed your worms. Allowing children unsupervised access to your insect farm could be hazardous for your worms.

Improper drainage is not a good thing for your insect bins. Using contaminated water to ready your beds moist is harmful. Using paper or cardboard shreds that have come in contact with pesticides is another bad idea.

But the predators crapper be unmerciful maker of competition for any farm, including your insect farm. Many types of birds enjoy worms. Moles, hedgehogs, foxes, toads, snakes, beetles, leeches, slugs, and parasites all feed on worms. Parasites are another reason you have to be certain with the scatter you feed your worms. Mites and cluster flies crapper be hazardous predators to your worms.

Anything that is a danger to intake the food you feed your worms crapper be a danger as well. Worms are voracious eaters, so if they aren't fed enough, they'll suffer or try to leave your insect beds. If another beast is intake up the food they need, you could suffer a great loss even if they aren't fascinated in intake the worms. If you have raccoons in your area, this may inform a difficulty since raccoons are known to be great at getting into containers and figuring out latches!

There's nothing wrong with feeding birds even when you won't be making a profit from it. But you may poverty to encourage the birds to eat in other areas of your field to distract them away from your insect beds.

If you have to worry about the community in which you live or if you live close to a public area, you may poverty to protect your worms from another type of predator. Thieves who poverty liberated fishing worms could inform a problem. Sometimes even living in the land isn't a guarantee that you won't have trespassers. So, make sure your access to the insect bins doesn't make it too cushy for discarded visitors of any kind!

One way to protect your insect farm from predators is to invest in a shed that crapper be locked and is constructed to make discarded access more of a challenge. Small birds crapper intend into diminutive places. If you crapper ready the story clean, it helps guard against invasion as well. A concrete story could be hosed soured easily. You'll have more success at protecting your investment if you ready the container they are in soured the story by using something to wage legs of whatever sort that crapper also be set in a bowl of water.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

What is Worm Farming?

Worm job has been around for years on various scales. While the reasons for insect job are not widely known, those who participate are big believers in the benefits that these worms have on the environment.

Many insect farmers commercially culture worms for profit. Specific breeds of worms are bred and are typically kept in breed specific quarters. Commercially raised worms are typically sold for composting. Some insect farmers dispense to landfills providing a uncolored method for composting waste.

These specifically bred worms are also utilised for soil fertilization. As worms take through the soil, they aerate and stir up the soil carrying water with them. The squander that is composted by the worms is broken downbound into a center that crapper be better utilised by the soil, improving the enrichment of the soil. A healthy soil is then produced for better growing plants, vegetables and crops.

In recent years, the supply of insect job equipment and accessories has made it easier for individuals to attain a hobby of this technique. Household sized bins are on the market in a variety of shapes and sizes. Home owners and apartment dwellers have been given the opportunity to raise their possess worms for squander compost and soil fertilization.

Worm job provides worms with a nutrient flush diet of what many times is thrown out with the garbage including discarded fruits and vegetables. Other compostable materials include essay products and cotton rags, leaves, egg shells and hair. Excreted by the insect is a nutrient flush center called vermicompost or insect compost.

Worms are also farmed for bait. Small bait and tackle shops often receive their livestock inventory from insect farmers providing fishermen with various worms to use as live bait. Fishermen who fish on a larger scale than the hobbyist often use these worms for bait for anglers and other large catches.

Many different worms are available depending on the job. Each variety of worms is utilised for its possess reasons. Red worms are commonly utilised for composting while the Belgian worms are good for both composting and bait. Home owners looking for worms to ready in lawns and flower beds will find success with Night Crawlers and Wigglers.

Worm job crapper also be an excellent educational tool. As using worms provide a more space effective way for composting, small kits crapper be purchased and even hand made to be utilised in a classroom setting. Students are able to participate in the project learning about how composting occurs. Using uncolored methods for composting and reaction squander in landfills is easily demonstrated by classroom insect farms.

Worms crapper be farmed meet about anywhere. With the various systems available on the market today, home owners crapper raise their possess supply of worms outside or in an apartment. Providing the correct turn of moisture, light, bedding, temperature and food will ensure a long living insect population. In return, the move will be a uncolored way for composting without filling up local landfills. As a result, nutrient flush soil is provided that crapper be utilised right away or stored for use during gardening season.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Understanding Worm Farming

Some grouping asks, "Why in the world would I want to have a insect farm? There are plenty of other multipurpose farms that sell vegetables, fruits, animals, and eggs. What good is a insect farm?" Well, it's an understandable reaction. After all, it's usually the quiet grouping in society that go unnoticed; so ground shouldn't there be quiet creatures that go unnoticed? People underestimate the value of the worm.

It's true that there are worms that do damage to crops, animals, and people. Worms in your intestinal grouping are best flushed out. That's ground dogs and cats, even horses and cows receive insect treatments. These worms are taking away nutritional values the animals need to survive.

What most the good worms? The first reaction to a insect is, "Ewww, gross." Or, "Is that a snake?" Well, understanding anything is the key to appreciating it more. No, a insect is not a snake. The good worms are not poisonous and have positive benefits that are not readily seen. They're hard-working little creatures and deserve our respect.

So, what are good worms? Earthworms, compost worms, and sport fishing worms are good worms. Earthworms are found in rich soil. If your plants are healthy and growing, chances are there are earthworms down there toiling away to help make this happen. Those die-hard fishermen crapper verify you most the benefits of a good, fat sport fishing worm! Catfish and bream are two of the type of fish that enjoy worms. Let's not forget the healthy birds that flock to your yard to sing and play for you and your children or husband. These birds eat more than just the seed in your feeder, which is a good thing since the seed will separate out and be irrecoverable by the well-meaning providers. That's where the worms come in to verify up your slack!

People farm worms for multipurpose reasons. But there are also reasons most grouping can't accept in general society yet. Worms’s crapper is great food for people. Mealworms, earthworms, grub worms, butter worms, and herb horn worms are all edible. There are restaurants in Singapore that offer worms as a meal choice. Worms are eaten in Thailand, Mexico, Australia, Africa, Asia, and South America. People who are trying to endure in the wild, like our military soldiers, are taught to eat worms as a source of protein. They're low in fat, too.

Although grouping may not readily eat worms in America, insect farms crapper still provide a source of exotic food for those who do. The worms crapper also be shipped to other places, but the temperature has to be right so they'll springy during shipment and upon arrival.

Worm farms crapper also display special food called "hornworm chow", meal, and flours for use in preparation breads and cakes. Hornworm chow is sold as a powder for most $10 per 1/2 pound to feed most 85 worms to adulthood. This chow also feed chameleons.

So, as you crapper see insect farms are special and understanding them crapper is interesting and helpful.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Odds and Ends to Note about Worm Farming

For the beginner, worm job can either seem like a simple adventure or something totally foreign to them. Some grouping has never been brave sufficiency to hold a worm, not to mention making a whole farm of them! So, let's explore some interesting odds and ends about worm farming.

Compost worms and earthworms are not the same. Earthworms loosen the soil. Compost worms eat the mulch layer of soil. Grub worms are not really worms at all. They're larvae from the June bugs that are pests to grouping in the southern parts of the United States. Catalpa worms are not really worms either. They're caterpillars from a moth species that are known to infest the Catalpa tree. Red worms are favorite as sport fishing bait. Tomato horn worms sound like lowercase monsters, but they're actually edible worms. Witchetty grub worms are served in restaurants as barbecued appetizers in Australia. Palm grubs are embattled by frying in hot pepper and salt. (Kind of makes you poverty to ask what the new dish is before you eat in a strange place, huh?) If you soak an earthworm overnight, it module purge the soil from them.

Odds are that the end result of many dishes served in other countries could be quite tasty. But most worm job in America is finished for other purposes. New word of the day is vermin composting! It sounds really smart and sophisticated, but it exclusive effectuation composting with worms. Worms are great lowercase workers for your compost container and can enrich the end result. This effectuation you have meliorate luck with that green molding you've been trying so hard to encourage!

You can build a worm containerful out of wood, plastic, concrete, an old bucket, or an old bathtub. If you really poverty an odd bin, create one out of an old toilet! You just knew you were saving it for something, didn't you? The exclusive problem with having strange bins is that you need to create a drain. You can't let your worm dirt get likewise soggy. They up rise to the top of the connector after a rain for a reason, you know.

Drainage creates another goodness of your worm farm titled worm tea. No, you don't drink it. That would be farther likewise odd and strength end with a sick stomach. You don't serve it to your worms either. Although it does create a cute picture to imagine them movement at a tiny table, holding their tiny lowercase tea cups and wearing tiny lowercase straw floppy hats!

Did you undergo you can feed your worms vacuum cleaner dust? Although you may poverty to ensure that you didn't just atmosphere the concern for bugs before you vacuumed.

Worm job can be as expensive or as low-cost as you opt to make it. How much does it cost to start a worm farm? Well, that's up to you. How fancy you think you need it? How large do you poverty to make it? What identify of worms do you poverty to start with? How much space module you have for new growth? How much money do you have available for the adventure? What identify of business do you poverty to do if it is a business venture? Whatever your choices are, odds are that you'll end up learning something valuable!

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Tips for the New Worm Farming Adventure

There are some assorted types of worms that are both beatific for you and bad for you. You must prototypal know the difference before you choose which you invest in for your insect farming adventure. Worms such as tapeworms, ringworms, and pin worms are not beatific investments for insect farming. The types grouping raise to delude and ingest are those they can delude for fishing bait, food for birds and reptiles, or those used to help benefit the soil and their by-products.

Worms have no exoskeletons and are not created the aforementioned inside as humans and other animals. A insect has digit mentality and five hearts. Earthworms breathe in oxygen and breathe out copy dioxide. They can't control their own embody temperatures and can't maintain a embody temperature. When they're in captivity, they must depend on you to help them survive in the right temperature.

Some grouping grow insect farms for their own individualized adventure. Kids ingest them for pets. Gardeners encourage their ontogeny to gain healthy crops or flower gardens. They create excellent natural compost and fertilizers! Some grouping eat worms, although it isn't something that is a bounteous hit in the United States.

Composting is encouraged to help the environment and to ready the waste down that is hauled to landfills daily. Worm farming is digit small way to help. Small ways add up to bounteous benefits when sufficiency grouping join together in their efforts. If you have complaints about the environment, if you've thrown away food scraps, newspapers, sticks and gage clippings or leaves, if you want to be involved in a positive way to help then insect farming may be just the right adventure for you to take!

Earthworms, red worms, catalpa worms, and grub worms every attain beatific fishing worms. If you want a variety of worms, though, you need to know that not every worms are raised the same. Not every worms attain beatific bin partners because of the assorted temperature requirements.

Not every vegetables or food scraps attain beatific food for your worms either. Strong foods like onion, garlic, and hot peppers are not as readily welcomed. If the worms don't want to eat them, they'll eat everything else first. That leaves a smell to your insect bin, which can smash your new adventure really fast! It's not like your own mom making you eat every your vegetables when you were little. These are not children and shouldn't be tortured to withstand foods they don't want. If you feed an birdlike something that isn't beatific for it or that it doesn't like the taste of, it can decease itself to death and will just end up resenting you or trying to carelessness to get to the better food source. Meat products are not a beatific intent for your worms either since they can contain diseases, poisons from the animal's grouping created by the medicines you must give your pet, and also a bad smell when decomposing.

Check out what the other insect farmers are doing. Their prices, shipping methods, growing bins, advertisements may every come in handy for serving you plan your own adventure in insect farming.

Monday, October 5, 2009

Who Benefits from Worm Farming

Worms have been a benefit to mankind and nature long before worm farming became well-known. Worms wage matter for other animals, support create and maintain healthy soil and plants, enhance husbandry efforts, wage seek bait, and support teach our children about pets and other valuable lessons.

Worm farms are a part of natural science. A nature museum or a zoo would benefit from a small worm farm as a display and to support take the animals kept there, as well as keeping the scenery bright and fresh because of the benefits to the earth. A petting zoo could make a worm farm part of their hands-on attraction. You might move a worm farm as a science project with a class or with your possess child. It would also make a good FFA project. A small husbandry club may poverty to invest in worm farming.

A person who raises birds could move a worm farm or buy from a worm farm to wage treats for their birds. Pet shops could buy from worm farms to take their seek or reptiles. Parents could benefit from a worm farm as a way to teach their young children about recycling, their first pets, compassion, the natural matter chain, gardening, and about business.

Worm farms are a way to support the economy by buying and selling. They wage a useful service by increasing the health of soil, they wage a useful product, and they encourage equipment sales. They increase the sales of the supplies needed to maintain the farms. They wage an extra income for the seller as well as jobs for any workers needed on the bigger farms.

Catfish farms would benefit from worm farms by starting their possess or buying from one for their seek food. Fishermen benefit from worm farms by using natural resources to seek to support keep downbound the sales of artificial lures, which cause extra trash along and in rivers, lakes, and ponds.

People who run chicken houses would benefit from worm farms because of the large amounts of matter the chickens need.

So, who benefits from worm farms? We all can. Even if you never touch a worm, you still take vegetables or fruit that come from the plants produced in the soil that worms helped make healthy! Gardeners have known the benefits for years because of the benefits to their compost piles and the results of their flower beds or vegetable gardens.

Worm farms can support a person open up conversations, which creates more acquaintances and possible friendships. They can bring people together who are nature lovers, fishermen/women, gardeners, recyclers, teachers, and even business owners.

People can learn to respect the hard-working little worms even if they never quite get over their squeamish reactions to them. Many worms are nature's friend. For those who aren't squeamish, worms can even be an exotic treat. They are well-known in other lands as a source of human food. Then again, many of us found discover as children taking dares that eating a worm is a fun way to gross discover our peers!

A Different Kind of Worm Farm

Worm farms are in effect in assorted states all over the United States. Because of the welfare in recycling and the ecosystem, these farms attain sense. Landfills get less bagged waste, crops are improved, other animals are fed a natural food, and the worms wage natural bait for fishing.

Worm farms can wage many things likewise worms. Worm gifts, worm candy, worm flour, worm breads, worm cookies, books, dvds, cute worm songs on cds, worm-related toys, fertilizer teas, compost, potting soil, cupped fishing bait, and hands-on activities for youngsters are some ideas.

Worm farming is technically known as vermin culture. It can be a profitable business, but it is not a way to attain a lot of money quickly. It takes patience, education, money, space, and marketing skills. You can't just throw a handful of worms in your yard and expect them to go to work and attain you rich!

If you want a assorted kind of worm farm, you first would want to research the another worm farms that are in the market. If you attain your worm farm unique and fun, you'll draw families. Families spend money on souvenir type items and knick knacks as memoirs of their adventures. Kids like games. Maybe you could create some playground equipment for your little visitors with designs that are based on worms. Demonstrations can attain your worm farm different.

You can attain your worm bins decorative as well to help maintain public interest. People like "eye candy". Things that are bright colored and fashioned grownup the eye. A person dressed in a worm meet to chat with the children would be a recreation addition to attain your worm farm different. A small worm farm museum would be interesting for school groups to visit, which would increase public welfare and attain your worm farm different.

You strength want to figure out how to hit a worm festival on your worm farm. Provided you hit sufficiency shack for parking and someone to direct traffic, this could wage advertising and recreation for you and for your visitors. Worm contests such as who can eat the most worm cookies or design the best worm poster, the most fictive worm prowess made with playdoh, or races in worm shaped cars are some ideas.

Educational benefits exist as well. Your worm farm can be used as a way to instruct the public on how important the worm is to our natural environment. It can teach people about another worms likewise the night walker and the worms that cause harm.

If you want a assorted kind of worm farm, it takes a beatific imagination and some ingenuity. Creating welfare and a public need is a beatific way to succeed. It also means you'll hit to stay "on-your-toes" to maintain that interest. Of course, it means more of an investment, too. But in the business world, it takes money to attain money. You just hit to "worm" your way into the public receptor and get noticed!

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

So what exactly is worm composting?


In simple terms, worm composting is the routine of using worms to recycle organic material and food scraps in to a useful soil amendment called “vermin compost”.

Worm farming is a composting routine known as icy composting. It is an alternative to hot composting garden waste and fruit and vegetable scraps from the kitchen. The fluid waste from worm farms is a highly concentrated fertilizer that can be collected, diluted and applied to gardens. The bedding in the worm farm is highly absorbent. Water rarely needs to be added. With the right worm farm you can start with only half of a kilogram of worms and within a few months you will have worms to consume most of the household food waste for two people. Commercial containers are available through some local councils, and through gardening shops and traders.