Friday, October 11, 2013

The 360 Diaries, Day 68


Excessive moisture in the bin... I didn't see that coming. Since we started this endeavor, I've read how important it is to maintain the correct moisture level for the worms. It's a delicate balancing act and must be monitored and maintained weekly. I thought I was doing a pretty good job of it. The bedding has to be moist enough that the worms can survive, and more importantly breath, as respiration is achieved through moisture through their skin. If the environment is too wet on the other hand, you can actually drown the inhabitants. As you prepare the bedding with each new added tray, you are supposed to do the "squeeze test." Grab a handful and squeeze it between your fingers- it should be moist enough to clump and release a couple droplets of water, but if too dry will not produce any water drops. The obvious correction if too wet is to add dry, shredded paper which will absorb the excess water. If it's too dry, you simply add a couple handfuls of moistened, shredded paper. If you're in a hurry, you can also dump a half cup of water on the newspaper that cover your food waste.

So why did I (all of a sudden) have a wet, soggy bin if I had been correctly moistening it. It was not obvious. I began to review what I added to the contents as I was convinced the bedding was right and then it struck me. A neighbor friend who had heard about our project, offered some kitchen scraps to the effort as she was excited about our worm farm. She gave me a kitchen size bag of green onion tops and corn husks. Apparently this was the culprit. The corn husks contain a high amount of moisture to begin with, and they are also green and full of nitrogen. This combination heated the bedding up with the breakdown of the corn and released a huge amount of condensation as a result. The tapper at the bottom of the system had been left in the closed position as it sits on the hardwood dining room floor. I'm told if you are adding huge amounts of moist, green kitchen scraps, the system gets pretty damp and you are to leave the tapper open so any excess can drain on it's own.

It was a perfect storm- closed tapper which retained the condensate, green, moisture-ladened corn husks and lots of them. I discovered the error when I took the system outdoors to harvest our first tray. When I removed the bottom processing tray, there it was- about 2 pints of dark, rich leachate in the bottom reservoir, and unfortunately a bunch of drowned worms. The upside is there were countless baby worms in the compost about a quarter inch long and looked like tiny hair follicles. Unfortunately there is no practical way to separate those from the castings, so into the earth they went with our compost. All was not lost as I took the liquid treasure and combined it with water and spayed the leachate tea all over our annual flowers in the yard which made the leaves shine! The flowers look pretty darn good too, growing in their nutrient rich worm compost. Remember, GottaBGreen has the best selling green products online!

For more info and where to purchase your own Worm Farm, shop http://gottabgreen.com and go to Grow/Compost or click on: http://gottabgreen.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=55&products_id=4538

 

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

The WormFarm Chronicles- Day 57... Harvest ON


Today we harvested our first tray of compost... really. It's been about 8 weeks since we started, and about what we expected in terms of the earliest we could reap the rewards of our "not so hard" work. It also says the longer you can let it brew, the better and richer it is. Actually, we figured this is long enough, since we're about to enter our last month of summer. Here's how the process worked.
I took the system outside and put it in the direct sunlight and removed the lower most tray or the processing tray, and set it aside. I took the cover off the upper most tray and removed the moistened newspaper cap. I then put the processing tray back on top of the rest and let the sun beat down on it. Worms hate the sun almost as much as they hate being in a dry environment. The sun dries the compost out and the worm retreat to the lower, darker and moistened bedding. This in theory, is supposed to clear your processing tray of the worms allowing you to harvest your "worm free compost." This actually worked better than I thought it would. I was told to let the processing tray bake in the sun for a couple of hours, then gently rake and turn over the contents allowing it to dry out quicker and exposing more worms on their way down. After two hours, I went out and did as i was instructed- raked, folded and overturned one layer at a time. To my surprise, most of the worms were indeed gone and I grabbed a couple stragglers and threw them down into the tray below. The only hitch was the tiny, new infant worms- they were still in the compost in pretty large numbers but there is no practical way to separate them so I dumped the compost little by little into a plastic bag lined box and that was that.

The quality and richness of the material was equally impressive. It looked very much like black, wet coffee grounds with a couple wads of soggy newspaper clumps, crushed egg shells and a couple potato pieces to boot. Actually, it is the waste product of about 1500 worms and the best part is there is no smell- my wife loves that part. The plan is to allow the compost to dry out for a couple days and then mix with potting soil- about 1 part worm castings to 4 parts dirt. Our harvest yielded about one 5-gallon bucket of castings and about two cups of liquid leachate. The blogs I've read on the subject also recommend leaving the treasure sit for a month or two so the compost can become more oxygenated and pH neutral. Although this is better, I don't think we'll be doing that as our growing season would be done by then and we'd never see how the stuff works. I've also waited long enough.
We'll be applying it to our flowers and plants this weekend. After a quick hose and wipe down, I return the system back to normal and put the worm farm back into the dining room. I have no doubt this harvesting process is fairly traumatic for the worms so we'll leave them alone, let them recover and chill out for a couple days before I bother them again.

 

For more info and where to purchase your own Worm Farm, shop http://gottabgreen.com and go to Grow Accessories or click on: http://gottabgreen.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=55&products_id=4538

 

 

 Kelley Murphy, the author is a new e-commerce business owner of gottabgreen.com, promoting and selling a responsible lifestyle and eco-friendly green products online. Looking to rid the world of plastic, follow his blogs and shop GottaBGreen.com at http://gottabgreen.com/

 

Monday, September 23, 2013

The WormFarm Chronicles- Day 49…. Part 2


Once you've allowed them to escape with their lives, you're ready to start collecting the treasure. First, take your small, yellow plastic 3x5 paddle and begin cutting the compressed compost into smaller cubes. Use an up and down cutting action to further reduce the size of the chunks. The material will still be moist and clumpy like clay, but that's not a big deal- use the little yellow rake and continue turning your castings over in an effort to dry. Now it's just a recovery mission. Use the paddle and a small trowel to collect the material in a container for future use. It should be relatively worm-free but there will be some worms remaining in your compost. You can afford to loose some as they have just about doubled to 2000 worms in their short stay with you. Now all that remains, is cleaning up your remaining trays with a hose, especially the collection base of the system which holds most of the water, manure and sediment. It's also a good idea to exercise the tapper and run some water through it as it sometimes will clog with silt.
Now more waiting- I hate all the waiting. I just want to start dumping compost all over my property but I read somewhere it's a good idea to let the compost sit or "cure" for a month or two. This curing time supposedly makes the compost less acidic, making it "bioavailable" to your plants and the waiting makes it more pH neutral. Recapping now, six weeks have elapsed since we began adding our first kitchen scraps to now, where we're taking out our first tray of worm castings. We need to wait another month while it rests, gains nitrogen and cures... sounds like a fine wine on its way to greatness. We're now ready to apply the compost to the flowers and plants. Mix 1 part worm castings to 4 parts potting soil. This combination of "amended" soil will be extremely nutrient rich, about 5 times richer than conventional potting soil I'm told. The leachate or liquid bi-product collected out of the bottom of the system, can also be sprayed on the leaves or added to your amended soil if you prefer. The cycle then continues by essentially repeating itself as we did originally.
Finally, one footnote. If you don't want to wait for the compost to cure for a month or two, that's alright but be careful where you use it. It is very nitrogen-rich and acidic. Acid loving plants like roses love this for fertilizer but most of your other flowers will react negatively to this pH balance and will probably burn.

For more information and a look at the system with, or without worms, go to: http://gottabgreen.com

The WormFarm Chronicles- Day 49…. Part 1


This past weekend marks an important milestone for us. It's been just over 6 weeks since we started composting kitchen waste products in the WormFarm 360. The menu the worms dine on has been very carefully planned and orchestrated. Selected food types include fruit and vegetable waste, paper, junk mail, fiber, coffee grounds, bread and egg shells. What we don't feed them are meats and fats, bones, bakery, citrus or other rich things and dairy. The other thing I learned is the worms are pretty high maintenance, their environment needs to be very tightly controlled. I share this with you, because we're getting close to harvest our first tray of worm castings which make up a good share of this organically rich compost for our plants, flowers and garden. I read in the instruction manual and it says, "with regular feedings, your worms should eat up to 2 pounds of waste per week and you should be getting the first tray of compost in 6-8 weeks. Personally I didn't believe it would be that quick- a more realistic timeline I thought was around 2-3 months. After which we might be realizing a usable final product. I was wrong, Tray 1 is ready. I have attached a picture below that shows the contents after 4 weeks of decomposition with the rigglers' help. I told myself we'd wait until 6 weeks to actually pull the trigger and just sat and admired my work for two weeks.

We're now ready to remove the contents of our initial processing tray and it occurs to me, I don't know how to do this. I will need to refer to the instruction manual to figure out exactly how to do this. You see, there are over 1000 worms in that compost I want to harvest. So how do you separate the worms and the compost? Must be a trick to it. Well the trick is, the instruction manual doesn't tell you. I googled the question and found a couple useful You-tube videos from people who have been doing it commercially for years. The answer is really pretty clever how you separate the worms and the compost, while not killing your worms and making a mess.

First, take your Worm Farm outside and set up a comfortable place to work in the sun. Next, take the processing tray or the lowest tray, out of your system and set it aside on a sheet of newspaper. Now return the stack of remaining trays into the system in the same order. Note that all trays have moved down one number and one tray closer to the ground. Tray 2 becomes tray 1, tray 3 becomes tray 2 and so on. On the top tray, or your freshest working tray, remove the cover and the moistened newspaper cap exposing the food scraps. Next, place the processing tray that you set aside, on top of the remaining trays exposing the dark muddy looking looking compost to the bright, hot sun. If you remember from an earlier blog post, worms hate light and dry surroundings as they need moisture to breathe and survive. Exposing the compost to then sun and drying it out quickly makes the worms head south almost immediately. Let this just bake in the sun and stir occasionally, which speeds up the process.They retreat to the moist, dark bedding below to escape the new, harsher environment. Give them an hour or so to migrate from the tray. Depending on the conditions it might take more or less time and you can always manually grab the last stragglers.
All for now, stay tuned for Part 2…

For more information and a look at the system with, or without worms, go to:  http://gottabgreen.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=55&products_id=4538
 

 

Monday, September 9, 2013

Our NEW Worm Composting Bin- The 360 Diaries, Day 40


Let's look at the worm... our worker bee. Earthworms have been around a very long time and can survive in extreme climates. Conventional wisdom has it the earthworms originated in Europe and came over to North America on boats with the early settlers and then migrated across the country to the west. That's a long crawl. The earthworms are found in all parts of the planet except extreme deserts and subarctic zones. There are over 7000 varieties of earthworms and they come in a variety of sizes from a quarter-inch to several feet long. They can live up to 15 years and their young begin to reproduce at just a few months old. There are a couple different kinds of worms that will adequately work in your vermicomposter, but the 'Red Wriggler' reigns supreme. It processes vast amounts of food, replicates quickly, is a crushing hyperactive machine and is actually the quintessential composting workhorse.
Most earthworms like to burrow deep into the dark and quiet, but the wriggler likes to burrow and scamper about in the very top layers. The other bonus is they are bred to do just this- be incarcerated in a dark, soggy box and be okay with it. Earthworms will jump ship at first chance. The Wriggler, not so much.

A bit about how they eat. They have a rather primitive or rudimentary digestive tract. They have no teeth and very few digestive fluids, they depend on bacteria and fungi, stinky molds and other nastiness to predigest their food. Worms can survive on any organic matter including starches and paper (junk mail) but get this- they need microorganisms, nematoads and protozoa (sounds like a law firm) to break down the fiber. When the food becomes small enough, the worm sucks the particle into it's mouth. Sand particles and particulate along with strong contracting muscles, grind and breakdown the food even more. Finally digestion occurs in the intestines of the worm, this is where the microbes mentioned above work. These microbes are what really digest the food and turn it into rich worm castings. Here's a bonus... In a scant 3 months, the wrigglers can be expected to double in numbers. The worms lay eggs and are incubated to cocoons. I saw some of these tiny, newborn worms last week- seemed pretty happy to be here. All in all, we're in a month and a half and everything looks good and on schedule for our first harvest in a couple weeks.

Kelley Murphy the author, owns a media production business in the healthcare vertical market, and is a new e-commerce business owner of gottabgreen.com, promoting and selling a responsible lifestyle and eco-friendly green products online. Looking to rid the world of plastic, follow his blogs and shop GottaBGreen.com for the Best Selling Green Products.

To see the WormFarm 360 GO HERE: For more info and where to purchase your own Worm Farm, shop http://gottabgreen.com and go to Grow/Compost or click on:


 

 

Monday, August 26, 2013

The WormFarm Chronicles... We're Pregnant!


You guessed it. Not only have I seen some weird little fuzzy clumps, I have seen about a dozen new workers, very light pink and about a quarter to half-inch long. The worms are duplicating and replicating and multiplying and ... and... well that's a good thing right? The more worms, the more composting power, the more garbage eaten and the more garbage eaten quicker. It's like souping up your '69 Chevelle. What's not to like? I've been happily feeding the worms crushed egg shells and mega fiber everyday in the hopes of getting things going. About once every two weeks, I add a good size handful of pumice, a gritty gravely kind of pebble-like stuff and a pinch of sand from the back yard. These things in concert, all add a little calcium bolus to the worms which make them fertile for reproduction, while the grit from the pumice and sand, aid in food crushing and creation of organically rich solid worm waste. So far, so good.

Speaking of the worm waste, our end game, we're just about ready to dump our first tray of compost from our original tray. Just like the owners manual says, you should be able start using compost about 6-8 weeks after you open for business. Obviously, the longer you wait, the better the quality of the compost. So if you're antsy to start using your unique WormFarm 360 bi-product, it's probably ready to use on your flower garden. If you're in no hurry for it or you have some other foods and fertilizers to use up, let the stuff simmer and bake a bit more and harvest at 90 days. It's like a fine wine.

When you're ready to start fertilizing with the vermicompost, you start by simply mixing (1) part compost to (4) parts soil and drop a handful or trowel full of the high test organic additive to your plants and flowers. You can also tap your WormFarm and harness the compost liquid bi-product that has been accumulating from moisture and condensate called leachate. You can either mix this with your solid compost or mix with water in a 50-50 solution. Apply this tea with a spray mist bottle to the leaves and it delivers amazing results and clean, shiny leaves I'm told.

Stay tuned to our posts and in a couple weeks, roughly start date plus 60, we'll be harvesting and adding worm poop to the garden and all the flowers. In the meantime, we continue with the weekly maintenance as previously described.
GottaBGreen.com offers the latest in Eco-friendly composting, recycling and urban grow solutions. Plastic-free trash and compost bags. For more on the WormFarm 360 with or without worms visit: http://gottabgreen.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=55&products_id=4538

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

The WormFarm Chronicles- The Next Month...Day 32


"What might have been" in the first month of us cultivating a worm-powered compost engine, has come and gone. We are two days into the second month and dare I say it's lost a bit of it's charm, perhaps the novelty has worm off or maybe it's just getting boring. I haven't really looked at the contents in about 10-12 days. I open the moistened newspaper cap and continue to dump food onto the top layer but I'm not really "looking" in there. When they feel me take the cover off and consequently see light, they disappear quickly. And that's just the top "working tray" where food is actively being consumed and eaten for the most part. The real composting occurs in the lower most tray called the "processing tray." I have been a stranger to this tray for about 2 weeks. That changed today.

Today was a maintenance day and I thought I'd start by replacing the old, soggy newspaper cap on the top of the working tray. This was the original newspaper that I added on Day 1. Didn't really know if you're supposed to replace it, you're probably not because it's half decomposed itself and will eventually turn into soil, but when l looked closely at this, and lately when I lift the corners to add food, the moldy mess just kind of falls apart. Enter about a dozen new soaked newspaper pages to cap off the tray. I threw the old one out. Next I spread newspaper on the floor and took my top 2 trays and set them on the floor for maintenance. Deep in the lowest tray or processing tray is where all the worms for the most part. I grabbed my soft little yellow rake and very carefully raked and turned the compost over- the idea here is to mix the contents with some new oxygen as it stimulates the breakdown already naturally occurring. This by the way, irritates the worms because well, some of them are being literally pulled apart. Oh well, they're worms. After I turn those rich layers over, I add a couple handfuls of pumice, kind of a sandy, gravel medium that helps the worms digest and grind food up in their gizzards. I like that word, gizzard.

After that tray is cared for, I move to the fresher working tray that is about half full but a little light on paper. I shredded up about a dozen sheets and I added another handful of pumice with the shredded paper. Just as with the processing tray, i raked and turned the contents until all has been overturned and aerated nicely. Next I added some cardboard egg containers and a slice of bread. This should balance nicely with all the fruit and vegetables I've been dumping in. I hope our worms like bananas, berries, carrots and snap bean pieces because they sure get allot of it. Important- 40% food 60% fiber, and I flip flop those every couple weeks for even more balance.

My charming wife saw through a relatively transparent act of goodness I offered her last week. I asked her if I could make her an omlet for breakfast because I loved her and liked doing nice things for her. I came clean that it was really for the worms- they need their calcium that aids in reproduction efforts you know. I told her it served her right for all the coffee grounds she been throwing into the garbage instead of throwing them in our one-month old rocking WormFarm 360!

Kelley Murphy, the author is a new e-commerce business owner of gottabgreen.com, promoting and selling a responsible lifestyle and eco-friendly green products online. Looking to rid the world of plastic, follow his blogs and shop GottaBGreen.com at http://gottabgreen.com/

 

 

Friday, August 9, 2013

Are we there yet? Day 25



Monday night, one of these nights.... 11:05 PM


Day 25 is upon us and yesterday i made an observation while moving the WormFarm 360 from the dining room to the covered patio deck. It is getting heavy. I haven't really thought too much about everything I've been dumping into it for the last month. I had a sneaking suspicion that 'garbage in' was not going to equal 'garbage out ' (GIGO) Perhaps the worms just keep eating the garbage and said garbage just magically disappears...not so much I've found. The temperature has been in and out of the 90's for the past couple weeks so I've been carrying the system in and out. It is a relatively cool today so they are residing outside again. I checked all the layers this morning and the moisture content feels pretty good- not soggy but not too dry either. It's beginning to look pretty organic, dark and chewy in there, so I expect everything's going as planned, and more importantly everyone in our family unit is happy and it hasn't caused any negative effects in our fragile ecosystem.


I've been promising to talk about the common sense approach to collecting kitchen waste and storing it before you dump it into your WormFarm. I've just been throwing the scraps into a tupperware bowl with a air tight lid and making the dump into the working tray once every couple of days. This way, we're disturbing the worms less and we're controlling the amount of food we put in front of them at one time. This is a good process but can be made even easier with biodegradable bags and a small kitchen waste container. Bio Bags waste bags are the perfect companion for bio-waste kitchen containers, primarily used for the collection of food scraps and other biodegradable waste for home or community composting. The term "superliner" means a normal waste can liner can be both thin and light- meaner cheaper, and still be as strong as a comparable Bio Bags waste bag. Made from cornstarch, these bags help to eliminate regular plastic bags from our environment. When disposed, these bags will biodegrade as naturally as food scraps, leaving no harmful residue. No Polyethylene is used in the production of this product. Bio Bags bags are GMO (Genetically Modified Organism) free, certified for use in organic agriculture.

Apparently, the worms don't mind them either The other thing I like about the bags is they work great in a traditional backyard compost. If you don't compost anything, but just throw away your garbage in white kitchen bags, make them Bio Bags because they won't be sitting in landfills 2000 years from now. They will disappear along with their contents in no time at all. Make so much sense it's a wonder more people aren't using them.... or is it they just don't know about them yet?

For a list of best selling green products, GottaBGreen.com offers the latest in Eco-friendly composting, recycling and urban grow solutions. Plastic-free trash and compost bags. For more on the WormFarm 360 with or without worms visit:

http://gottabgreen.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=55&products_id=4538
 

 

 

The WormFarm Chronicles


Our NEW Worm Composting Bin- The Chronicles, Day 18

03:05 PM

We're bearing down on 3 weeks with our new WormFarm 360, which is good because my partner is starting to ask questions like "Where's the compost....When can I dump the tray ... How long do we need to wait to get rich, organic worm castings for my box roses? Patience princess, It's not like microwaving oatmeal. We're actually waiting for mother nature to decompose this organic material in real time. We've probably all seen those cool time-lapse films of strawberries rotting, ice cream melting, the lifecycle of the dandelion and yogurt growing mold and shriveling up- all cool stuff. That's exactly what we're doing here, but we're using a thousand worms to gently accelerate the process. As far as quantities and timelines go, we're adding food scraps to the tray about 10 times per week before the tray is full- this tray we're dumping into, is called the "working tray." We try to stick to a 60/40 mix of food to fiber. The fiber is paper, cardboard, junk mail, paper towels etc., while the food is just about anything other than meat and citrus. The meat, too fatty and greasy, leads to a smelly worm bin. The citrus radically upsets the pH of the worm bed and freaks the worms out. Under that "working tray", is the "processing tray," or the first tray we filled when we started, also the bottom tray. That's where the compost is, or where the most involved layer of food decomposition occurs- the oldest stuff. Since I added the second tray with new food scraps about a 3 days ago, I haven't looked at the processing tray.

Monday morning is my WormFarm 360 maintenance day. I usually get up early and take the layers apart and get a look at the contents of these different trays. If you remember from the top, our tray 1 is nothing but dead leaves. This tray acts as a barrier between fruit flies and the food waste beginning to decompose in our active tray, or tray 2. I peel back the 4 or 5 sheets of soggy newspaper which act as a moisture cap to the new garbage. Yeah, the worms are doing their thing. I inspect this layer carefully and see the worms fully involved in a pile of coffee grounds, which is a treat for them I read, a pile of moldy bread scraps, asparagus, carrot, beans and celery scraps. I also had a whole bunch of strawberry tops and cut up banana rind, melons and 4-6 crushed egg shells. Layer 2 looking good... all decomposing, everything moist, nicely balanced, clean and running well. Now onto the processing tray or tray 3, which I haven't seen in awhile.

Upon initial inspection, everything looks like it has been compacted like a sheet of patchwork concrete. I remember from the manual, that after a couple weeks, and a every couple weeks thereafter, I'm supposed to take the little yellow rake enclosed in the kit, and gently mix up the layer- kind of gently folding the top to the bottom and getting some fresh, new air in there. You have to go easy and gently because there's a boatload of worms in there and they're not happy to see you, or to be seen. This mixing it up, aerates the contents and speeds up the decomposition. I'm guessing were about half way to the finish line with this tray. Most of the food products have disappeared into rich, dark brown globs, but there's still a good amount of the paper squares and cardboard still there. I think our tray is about two weeks from being soup- that would mean it takes about 5-6 weeks to make a tray of compost providing the conditions are right, you feed them regularly- but not overfeed, and keep the temperature and moisture content to their liking. We've had hot and humid weather as of late, and the forecast is for more of the same. Therefore, the worms go back to the dining room as that's too warm for them on the screen porch. They go deep into the core of the bedding and slow way down, kind of like us. Next week, I'm planning on buying biodegradable bags and building another old school compost pile in the back yard.

Day 18... all good.

For a list of best selling green products, GottaBGreen.com offers the latest in Eco-friendly composting, recycling and urban grow solutions. Plastic-free trash and compost bags. For more on the WormFarm 360 with or without worms visit:
 
 
 

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

The Worm Farm Chronicles- The 360 Diaries... Day 12


Day 12 dawns on a new era. The worms having pretty much pulverized the contents of the initial level 1 processing tray, are ready for more! We have moved on and up, setting up a new, clean working tray. After setting it up with the recommended bedding, I've placed it on top of the initial processing tray. They stack pretty nicely, they appear to be level and so far, we haven't had any escaped worms from the system. I expected some.

How this change-up occurs is pretty interesting. The initial tray was composed of a layer of coconut coir, (found on many green products websites) shredded moistened newspapers, dead leaves, some humas and some tiny little sticks for good measure. We dropped our 1000 wrigglers in on top of the moistened bedding and they not so quickly, disappeared down into the bedding apparently heading away from the sunlight and to the dark, quiet and dark. The first bait awaits, a lettuce scrap, shaved potato scraps and a pile of coffee grounds. Next I added 8-10 sheets of soggy newspaper over the whole thing to keep moisture in for the worms. Throughout the first week, I continued to add food scraps, paper products, junk mail and whatever into it, to see what they like. Answer is, everything so far.

More about setting up the new tray. I was instructed to create the new bin very similar to how I set up the first. We start with a couple handfuls of moistened coir, an excellent drainage medium, and add a couple moistened handfuls of shredded newspaper as we did as with the first tray. Now that the moisture content and texture of the bedding is right for them, I just need to add some handfuls of brown leaves from my yard- mix it all together and just add food. When you're ready to add the new tray, you open up the initial tray and remove the big, thick moistened cap and replace it over the contents of the new, working tray. Now there is nothing that separates the first two trays (the working tray and processing tray) except thousands of little holes making it easy for the worms to travel between the layers. Up for new food, down for old. Up for warm and down for cool, soggy and dark. The worms quickly migrate up and latch on to the new food supply as it smells wonderful and is new and fresh. They flood into the new bin in huge numbers in about an hour.

What was on the menu? Moldy bread pieces, coffee grounds, carrots, celery, onion waste, a whole bunch of strawberry tops, yellow peppers, green bean tips, some stale pretzels, old popcorn and a real mushy banana. With all the fruit I just added, I add another tray of just dry, shredded paper and dead leaves...the third to my two existing food layers. This 8 inch barrier of dead leaves deter the fruit flies. I've been storing the food scraps in a plastic container in the refrigerator in between feedings, I want to try out these bio degradable kitchen bags next- that way i can throw the entire contents right into the heap! I try and feed my worms about every 8-10 hours with some new food and fiber. The book says you should pay attention to a good, healthy balance of the two and avoid feeding them any fatty, greasy meats of any kind. Now I add the top to the third layer and we're a composting machine again.

Being an eco-friendly worm farmer appeals to me. Gives me sense of purpose, something more to do. It's the ultimate in curiosity, fresh thought and learning something new. It's like watching grass grow, like waiting for the robins eggs to fall out of their nest. That happened at our place the end of last week too. The biggest challenge I'm facing so far is keeping my guys in a more consistent temperature environment. When they arrived a couple weeks ago we were battling 40-45 degree overnights. Even though my wife actually suggested bringing the worm farm into the kitchen/dining room to escape the cold, I saw it as a trap and took them a sleeping bag instead. This past weekend the daytime highs were 85-90 degrees and pretty sticky... worms don't like over 80. I 've been adding about a cup of water to the newpaper cap every morning to keep it moist.

Sunday the temperature hit 93 !!*@!! *#$!!%!!
The wife character was not to be found when I made the quick decision to bring them into the air conditioned dining room to a cooler, safer temperature for their overall peace of mind. When she did arrive home, riding a gardening store high, she never said a word about it - I knew she saw it because i paced in front of it like a lawyer in front of a jury. We enjoyed a wonderful Sunday evening meal at the table with our quiet little work horses grinding away in the corner. You know what?

My wife is alright.

For a list of best selling green products, GottaBGreen.com offers the latest in Eco-friendly composting, recycling and urban grow solutions. Plastic-free trash and compost bags. For more on the WormFarm 360 with or without worms visit:
 

 

Monday, June 17, 2013

Worms Up! Day 7


Day 7, I hear it.

The WormFarm 360 is coming up to speed. In my little feeble brain, the best worm composting bin money can buy. After the first couple nights on the back patio where the overnight low temperature was around 45 degrees, the temperatures rose nicely over the weekend into the mid 70's and the evenings came and went in the mid 50's. I would also guess with the afternoon sunset hitting the dark green worm farm it warms the bin up some between 4 and 6, and then holds that temp trapped well into the evening. I last left you on Day 3, just after their first feeding. Here's what's been going on since.

Along with the temperatures moderating a bit over the weekend, the worms had just spent their 4th night on the deck and seem to be relaxing in their new habitat. I was pretty shocked to see many frenzied worms crawling all over this food. After 3 days of them being pretty lethargic to wow.... these worms got they grove on now. Late Sunday I added along with some junk mail, a banana, three muskmelon rinds, 4 crushed egg shells (and the carton) some strawberry tops, cut yellow pepper pieces and two or three cups of spent coffee grounds. I'm told the coffee grounds are treats to them and the grounds texture makes for some tortuous grinding in the gizzards of these crushing composting machines. That was some color.

I remember reading in the owners manual, one of the disadvantages to the WormFarm 360 if you don't operate it right, is excessive moisture content that can lead to fruit flies. What a drag. It was reported if any one of these conditions became a issue, to monitor your moisture content regularly and moisturize bedding with soggy paper scraps or a cup of water. If you're too wet, drain existing and subsidize bedding with dry shredded paper. For the fruit flies I tried their recommendation and loaded an empty tray above the food with dead leaves and/or shredded newspaper- kind of creating a 8-10 inch buffer zone for them to labor through to get to their fruit. Apparently these flies aren't very driven and loose interest quickly.

Happy to report after one week it's humming along just like the book says. No fruit flies, no bugs, no smell, no fuss. I have completely filled tray 1 and will begin filling tray 2 with more food on Day 9 or 10. I think I'm probably on the edge of feeding them too much at once so I'm going to pull back a little bit and give them some time. I have to remember that we're doing real breakdown and rotting of food and that's doesn't happen as quick as everything in our lives we are used to. It's not like warming a bagel in the microwave, it's more like watching paint dry but it's fun with a Guinness. It looks easy, so far... Next week I'm planning an incoherent ramble about bio degradable composting bags (which are very cool) and a plastic-free alternative to trash and compost bags. Down the road, some eco-friendly compost tips and some funky urban grow solutions.

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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Worms Working For A Living



Our NEW Worm Composting Bin- Day 3

Good day and welcome to Day 3.

So this is our new website and we're new at this. Not so new at being earth smart and environmentally friendly- been doing that for years, but new to the e-commerce business and selling products online. So far we're having fun with it and it's always fun to learn something new. As an integral part of our product offerings, we sell the 'Worm Farm 360' self-contained worm composting system and had to buy one for general product knowledge. Talk about your learning...this is right up there with my science fair exhibit in 6th grade. I think this is going be a great hobby.

We took delivery of 1000 red wrigglers on Thursday... oh there are pictures. My partner (the wife character) squirmed and somewhat recoiled at the site of them on the dining room table. Yes, they were still in the bag. After preparing the worm farm as directed, to a strict formula of bedding, moisture, starter food and some decomposing brown leaves from last year to kick off the composting process, we're ready to do the vermaculture.

We gently pour the worms into the bedding made from shredded newspaper, sand, pumice, a hand-full of potting soil, some dead leaves ala. 2012, and a couple scraps of lettuce in the corners... they have to go out and find it I'm told. Thus the acclimation process for the worms begin. This is kind of boring- you set it and forget it. The book says put the cover on and leave them alone for 3 days while they get used to their new digs. I gave them a half day.

They seem to be well integrated into the bedding and crawling around the lettuce scraps, boiled potato pieces and coffee grounds I added this morning. I pulled out some more perfectly good lettuce from the refrigerator to feed them because we didn't have any food scraps in the hopper. I talked my wife into scrambled eggs just so i can feed them the shells. It's going pretty well so far even after a couple of cool nights. I covered them with a sleeping bag to be sure, but you could bring them inside if it drops below 40 degrees. I had permission for that strangely enough.Temperature consistency is pretty important- their limits are 40-80 degrees. Once we get the composting crushing machine up to speed they should be eating about 2-3 lbs of garbage a week. No rolling, tumbling or fumbling required for the compost- the worms drill thousands of holes in between the food trays and oxygenate the compost nicely, without smelling funny. Fresh strawberry tops were added an hour ago, we'll see how they like them.

Talk to you Day 7.