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Worm Composting: Nature's Little Helpers

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When you see a worm, what do you think about? Do you think that it is a good day for fishing? Or are you disgusted and run the away? How about composting? Worm composting is an easy but productive way to get the most out of your rubbish.

Worm composting is using worms to transform table scraps and kitchen leavings to valuable soil, vericompost, castings, or vericast. This is achieved by worms eating the compost ingredients, passing it through their body, their digestive process takes a few nutrients and then it passes the rest of the materials out the tail as compost. This valuable worm compost material can be added directly to your garden or add it to your other compost and enhance the nutrient content. The vegetable and fruit peelings have a high nutrient content and the worms love to eat them, so why not feed the worms your garbage and let them produce some high quality soil. This soil will help you grow more vegetables and fruits.

Having a worm composting farm can be an easy way to help your garden. The little wigglers take little maintenance. They are going to eat what you were going to throw away anyways. A couple things you will need are:

• A container – This can be made of plastic, wood, or glass; it is up to you. The container does not need to be as deep as it needs to be long because worms only live in the first six inches of the soil. A cover for the bin that allows for little light but air is important too. Make sure you make holes in the bottom of the container for drainage – you do not want to drown your new investment. The container is considered to be the heart of worm composting.

• Worm bedding – You do not need to tuck your worms in but they do need suitable materials to live in. Moist paper strips are the best materials to use. You can rip newspapers but another good idea is shredded paper. If you have a paper shredder or know someone who works in an office then your worms will make great use of it all; just be sure there are not staples or plastics in the mix.

• Worms – You need the star attraction. You can go to your local farm store or search online for your best option to get this process going. Worms are considered to be the soul of worm composting.

Worms are hard workers. They work around the clock by putting the garbage through the front and disposing nutritious soil out the back. Why not let your garbage work for you with worm composting.


Other Composting Crocks related Articles

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Composting Tips

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Composting Crocks Specific links

Composting Crocks News

Food Scrap Shredder Cranks Up Composting - EarthTechling


Food Scrap Shredder Cranks Up Composting
EarthTechling
by Beth Buczynski Composting is a great way to reduce your contribution to landfill waste, while upcycling what would otherwise be garbage into a valuable soil amendment. Even though the concept of composting is simple–let biodegradable things rot and ...

Read more...


Ecotonix Launches Green Cycler: the First Consumer-Level Food Shredder and ... - San Francisco Chronicle (press release)


Ecotonix Launches Green Cycler: the First Consumer-Level Food Shredder and ...
San Francisco Chronicle (press release)
Composting, organic gardening and food scrap recycling will take a progressive step forward with the introduction of Green Cycler the only counter-top appliance to eliminate the mess and hassle associated with recovering organic waste.

and more »

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Simply Put — Making use of food scraps - NCAdvertiser.com (blog)


Simply Put — Making use of food scraps
NCAdvertiser.com (blog)
But I prefer to use a kitchen compost crock, which sits cutely on your countertop, ready for the filling. You can find them online in a variety of shapes and colors. They are decorative and very convenient. Now let's talk location, location, location.

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Celebrate International Compost Awareness Week - Care2.com


Care2.com

Celebrate International Compost Awareness Week
Care2.com
I compost everything I can, and I honestly think it's really fun. I simply have a covered crock sitting on my kitchen counter that I dump often into a couple of bins I made in my backyard out of wooden stakes and chicken wire.

and more »

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Annual plant sale powers Field and Flower Garden Club - Barrington Courier-Review


Annual plant sale powers Field and Flower Garden Club
Barrington Courier-Review
Sackville-West goes on to describe drilling holes and filling the bottom of the tubs with a layer of broken crocks, then a layer of “fibrous leaf-mould,” then finally your rich soil, “turfy fibrous loam and some compost and some bone-meal or some ...

and more »

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Too Much of a Good Thing? - Waste Management World


Too Much of a Good Thing?
Waste Management World
DOWN TO EARTH Ecologic's bottles, made from recycled cardboard and newspaper, can be composted; their lining can be recycled along with plastic grocery bags. At Anuga FoodTech 2012 in Cologne, Germany, earlier this year, Tetra Pak unveiled four new ...

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