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kumquat1_gw

It can't be that hard!

kumquat1
13 years ago

I broke my lower leg in 3 places, followed by rods, screws, etc. So I am laid up with only the GardenWeb to entertain me. I have always wanted to start a FT bin, and spent quite a bit of time reading through your old posts here. I am ready as soon as my boot is off the leg. But getting cabin fever here (or recliner chair fever), I had asked my husband to bring me some (maybe 6, total) red wigglers out of the garden, some cardboard, etc., and started a little "bin" in a 1/2 gal jar I had around the house. This was 4 weeks ago. Have been checking on them regularly and enjoying the project. I got creative and poured an ounce or so of cold coffee into the mess. Thought surely that would kill them as it is soupy at the bottom of the jar. They are crawling all around, especially down in the soupy cardboard at the bottom which is saturated in the old coffee. They are very active and seem happy. The jar smells like good dirt, and not anything spoiled at all. there seems to be a small amount of black mold. I was wondering if that is a bad thing. I thank you all for your wisdom and all the joy you bring to the world.

Comments (10)

  • lkittle
    13 years ago

    bump

  • plumiebear
    13 years ago

    Sorry to hear about your leg. I wouldn't worry about small amounts of mold. I've not read that any amount of mold bothers the worms, but some people don't react well to certain molds. Here's more reading material to keep you occupied: DIY Flow Through bins: a collection of links

    Cheers,
    Andrew

  • randomz
    13 years ago

    Any chance of getting more worms?

  • kumquat1
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    I just wanted to be sure I had a boy and a girl :-) Actually about 5 worms. It is such a small space in the jar, and I wanted to be sure they would thrive and eat before going all out. More worms? Soon as I get this boot off my leg, I will be starting a big FT setup. We have a bait store that sells cartons of red wigglers, so I will be there with bells on some day soon.

  • susanfromhawaii
    13 years ago

    I think it's a lot less expensive to get them from composting worm suppliers than bait shops.

    Also, worms are hermaphrodites. That means that each one is both male and female. When they mate, each gives sperm to the other and each sheds fertile capsules. You don't need to worry about making sure you get at least one male and one female. Just 2 worms will do, any 2 worms of the same species.

  • kumquat1
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Thanks Plumie for the links. V good info there. I have a question: Being from Florida, what about the frikken cockroaches? I am thinking of a small container, like a soda can with boric acid/sugar inside, tucked into the harvesting "hole". Or setting the whole bin inside a tray with water or boric acid. Are you guys bothered by the dreaded fire ant or cockroach?

  • aufin
    13 years ago

    Ahhh .... The dreaded La Cucarachas. If ya got'em ya got'em. If not, well I don't think they should be much of a problem unless the area around the bin is allowed to get to the point of attracting them. I live in central W. Fl and have had my 55 gal drum flow-thru worm ranch outside for a couple years. No roaches - knock, knock. Seems, to me anyway, a worm bin would be quite attractive to them, but mine hasn't been discovered - yet. I've been expecting to see them, but haven't found any. As to the boric acid tray, I can't imagine what harm it might do.

    Keeping worms isn't rocket science and the herd seems to be quite flexible as to their environment as long as a few simple quidelines are followed - don't make/let things get too wet-or dry, don't overfeed to the point of things getting nasty/sloppy(wet), keep the bin out of too much direct sunlight. A small bin is going to be much less forgiving of mistakes than a large bin. If/when you do do something wrong, the worms will let you know by staging a jail-break. Usually it's something that's been done in feeding to make their environment too wet. After correcting the problem, remember what you did and don't do that anymore, and the guys should do just fine. I'm probably oversimplifying the process, but really, it's not "that hard" to keep the guys pacified and have a thriving worm ranch.

  • kumquat1
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Whew! Cool to know, aufin. If roaches are going to be anywhere, they would be around a Florida worm bin, I was thinking. Good news.

  • iammarcus
    13 years ago

    Andrew
    I just checked your list of DIY FT and to a newbie it looks like you just dump the food material in the top and wait for compost/castings to come out the bottom. Do you have to encourage it to flow through in some way? Shake it, remove part of it or what?
    Dan

  • randomz
    13 years ago

    Usually scrape up from the bottom hatch to get the castings to drop.

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