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jadeite_z7

can worms eat cactus?

jadeite
10 years ago

We have a lot of dying cactus around the house. I have found that cactus can be composted, but can I add them to the worm bins? I can find nothing about whether the cactus will appeal to the worms, or whether it will harm them as it breaks down. People who have composted cactus say that it oozes a lot of liquid which can be smelly in a compost bin. DH is convinced that cactus needles are immortal and will stay in the bin forever.

Thanks,
Cheryl

Comments (9)

  • chuckiebtoo
    10 years ago

    Cacti? Si !
    Needles? No

    Carlosbtoo

  • armoured
    10 years ago

    Try it and let us know!

  • jadeite
    Original Author
    10 years ago

    I put a piece of cactus into a worm bin yesterday. It was aggressively spiky, so this will be a good test.

    Cheryl

  • chuckiebtoo
    10 years ago

    Long after putting teabags into bins, I find those little staples from the bags. The wormies just will not eat them.

    UnLike aggressively spikey cactus spines, uneaten tea bag staples are few and far between, are a brightly shiny metallic with a relatively dull point not prone to prick the fingers of the worm herder poking around in there doing worm herders' chores, and easily removed from further finger-pricking potential during subsequent excursions into the bin.

    Anything that goes into the bin that remains uneaten, well, remains....or rots....or in the rare exceptions, petrifies. None of those possibilities are conducive to optimal bedding environs.

    Chuckiebtoo

    BTW...On the other hand, some things in bins that are solid.....like twigs or corn cobs (my favorite)....are helpful, and used as "rubbing poles" when worms want to scrape those cocoons off their neck areas at the moment of "birth?".

    Ain't nature grand!!

  • armoured
    10 years ago

    Yeah, the worms just don't seem to want to eat metal!

  • Niivek
    10 years ago

    This reminds me of when I put a few handfuls of dog hair from my barking turd factory over the winter. When I harvested this summer, there were all these hard spikey gigeresque things throughout the bin. Kind of the consistancy of a finger nail. They were pretty easy to pick out, but kind of nasty. Dunno if I'll go back to feeding the worms dog hair.

  • pcindc
    10 years ago

    I think Chuckiebtoo makes a great point: the cactus will disappear, but I'm fairly certain that the spiky needles will remain to prick your fingers when you have occasion to put your hands in the bin (feeding, adding bedding, harvesting, checking the worms out, etc.). If I were you I would take the cactus out, pull out the spikes with pliers, dispose of them in the trash (or maybe they'll burn), and put the spikeless cactus back in the bin. You don't want to be pulling spikes out of your fingers for years! Just my thought.

  • armoured
    10 years ago

    I say wait and see! Maybe the spikes will decompose - just be careful and give it a bit longer.

  • chuckiebtoo
    10 years ago

    The spikes will decompose....but not in a "bit" longer. Actually a LOT longer. This is based on observances of similarly structured denser objects...like pumpkin stems, or twigs in horse manure, or chopped up corncobs.

    It's lots easier and more practical to have decomposition and edibility progress at similar rates.

    Contrary to that old erroneous wormers' holy grail, I spend a lot of time rummaging around in bins, experimenting, observing stuff, and continuing to be more and more positive that the wormies could care less if I'm "bothering" them. I haven't had a mass evacuation in about 15 years....no matter what horrible impositions I put them thru.

    Matter of fact, the easiest way to correct that malady when the worms become lethargic and begin to stagnate in the bottom of a bin that's too-wet down there? Stir it all up with your WONDERSTICKtm. The wormies will snap out of it and get back to work.

    Anyway, because I DO spend lots of time with worm poop on my hands, I would not put stuff capable of pricking those fingers into the mix. For the same reasons, I don't put dog poop, or cow, or human in them, or stinky, slimy, or otherwise disgusting stuff in there either.

    Chuckiebtoo

    wonderstick: