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- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!gatech!concert!rutgers!network.ucsd.edu!sdcc12!sdcc13!afong
- From: afong@sdcc13.ucsd.edu (Krell Kraver)
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Subject: Re: Wormbin question
- Message-ID: <42969@sdcc12.ucsd.edu>
- Date: 1 Jan 93 19:14:39 GMT
- References: <1993Jan1.032527.5904@math.ucla.edu>
- Sender: news@sdcc12.ucsd.edu
- Organization: University of California, San Diego
- Lines: 51
- Nntp-Posting-Host: sdcc13.ucsd.edu
-
- In article <1993Jan1.032527.5904@math.ucla.edu> ramirez@julia.math.ucla.edu (Alice Ramirez) writes:
- >
- >So I got a plastic foam lidded box that a friend had available (shipping
- >crate from some mail order frozen steak company). I burned airholes into
- >its sides with a heated screwdriver. I filled it about five inches deep
- >with potting soil. Bought about 150 redworms to put into it. Tossed
- >in my kitchen scraps.
-
- First thing first. You need some type of bedding that will allow
- air to circulate around the garbage (allowing AEROBIC bacteria to
- help with the digestion instead of smelly AENEROBIC (sp?) bacteria).
-
- >About 3 weeks later, I decided to look more closely, to see how all this
- >rotting garbage was coming along. And found bugs. They seemed to be
-
- The bin is really an entire ecosystem. I don't think there's a way
- to avoid it. In my worm bin I have just outside the side door,
- there are earwigs, fruit flies (small in number usually!) and
- spiderss (which feast on the fruit flies). There are COUNTLESS
- things I havne't bothered to notice or that have only existed in
- there for a few weeks or so. Its not just the worms that digest the
- garbage.
-
- Mary Appelhof, who you've seen mentioned in an earlier post as the
- author of Worms Eat My Garbage, says that a basement is a good place
- for a bin. I assume this is because of temperature
- considerations... worms don't deal with cold too well (I'm having
- some problems now, and I live in San Diego! It gets down anywhere
- from freezing to the 50's at night). You might consider only taking
- your garbage out to the bin once or twice a week (keeping it in a
- separate trash can under the sink until then) if your bin is located
- somewhat inconveniently.
-
-
-
- >crawling versions of those nasty little black flies. I started thinking
- >about the possibility of attracting cockroaches. The wormbin ended up
- >outdoors, just outside my back door. And then when I was out of town it
- >rained and flooded my wormbin and my worms drowned.
- >
- >I would like to try again, once everything dries out to moderate moisture.
- >Is there any way, keeping the wormbin indoors, to prevent unwanted bugs?
- >(The people who have posted about wormbinning seem all to come from
- >cold climates, such as Canada, so maybe the bugs problem is strictly a
- >warm-climate problem). If the problem is universal, or if anyone else
- >has dealt successfully with this problem, please post or at least
- >email me at ramirez@math.ucla.edu
- >
- >I really love the idea of wormbins (even though worms make rather boring
- >pets. :-) ). I would like to keep my worms indoors since it is a
- >flight of stairs to the outside and I am lazy. Thanks in advance.
-