TheBeardedBudzman
Well-Known Member
Hi there everyone. New user here. I did a few months worth of rigorous studying in preparing for my first grow, with the help of these forums. So thanks for all the info so far. Got my first question for you all.
I recently moved to south central Florida from Boston. My first job when I got here was at Uncle Jim’s Worm Farm- maybe lots of you are familiar with the red wriggler distributor. It’s an enormous 150 flat acres of a sea of worm beds. Harvesting worms with tractors and pitchforks, putting them through motorized sorters, Hand sorting them in the sun in 55gallon bins cut in half. Weighing, processing, packaging. Man what a nightmare of a job that was....**shudders**
I’ve moved on to far greater things job wise, but I’ve maintained a cordial relationship with good old Uncle Jim. So I’ve got access to billions of worms and mountains of worm shit. I also own horses and chickens and I am surrounded by cow pasture, so unlimited manure. And I want to stick to organic soil growing... So what I’m wondering is:
Can I rely 100% on worms to compost all of my compost-able material? Shredded leaves, kitchen scraps, manure, etc?
Or should I stick to traditional composting, like 3-bin system, with some worms thrown in for my actual COMPOST, and then keep a few big fat worm bins to harvest castings, and consider the castings more of a compost nitrogen-rich additive?
Does anyone have any huge tips for me in my given situation? I know lots of people vermicompost- is there anything you all ever think, like, “man if I had access to 50 lbs of worms”
I know 1K is weighed at a pound. Roughly. I can have as many as I want. I guess I’m just hoping to hear that worms can be my 100% compost source rather than having to do traditional cooking
Sorry for long typing I’m stoned and am terrible at being blunt and direct and concise.
-Beard
I recently moved to south central Florida from Boston. My first job when I got here was at Uncle Jim’s Worm Farm- maybe lots of you are familiar with the red wriggler distributor. It’s an enormous 150 flat acres of a sea of worm beds. Harvesting worms with tractors and pitchforks, putting them through motorized sorters, Hand sorting them in the sun in 55gallon bins cut in half. Weighing, processing, packaging. Man what a nightmare of a job that was....**shudders**
I’ve moved on to far greater things job wise, but I’ve maintained a cordial relationship with good old Uncle Jim. So I’ve got access to billions of worms and mountains of worm shit. I also own horses and chickens and I am surrounded by cow pasture, so unlimited manure. And I want to stick to organic soil growing... So what I’m wondering is:
Can I rely 100% on worms to compost all of my compost-able material? Shredded leaves, kitchen scraps, manure, etc?
Or should I stick to traditional composting, like 3-bin system, with some worms thrown in for my actual COMPOST, and then keep a few big fat worm bins to harvest castings, and consider the castings more of a compost nitrogen-rich additive?
Does anyone have any huge tips for me in my given situation? I know lots of people vermicompost- is there anything you all ever think, like, “man if I had access to 50 lbs of worms”
I know 1K is weighed at a pound. Roughly. I can have as many as I want. I guess I’m just hoping to hear that worms can be my 100% compost source rather than having to do traditional cooking
Sorry for long typing I’m stoned and am terrible at being blunt and direct and concise.
-Beard