Step by Step Instructions on how to build your very own Worm Composting Bin. This is a 5 minute project. I completed it in 3 minutes with a cold beer in one hand. You can buy worms locally or from several sources online. I purchased 2lbs of Red Wigglers online for $29.99.
Here’s all you need:
2 Rubbermaid tubs (or cheap knock-off like these) or some old 5 gal buckets.
2 blocks (in this case a couple 2×4 pieces)
Shredded Paper (I find that worms like bill collection letters the best)
Kitchen Scraps (no meat or dairy products just veggies)
Crushed egg shells (provide calcium)
Cheerios and coffee grounds (with filter)
Worms (Red Wigglers or Eisenia foetida, are the best compost worms)
Drill (2 bits 1/8″ and 1/4″)
Step 1: Drill 1/8″ holes in the top (for oxygen) and 1/4″ holes in the bottom for worm juices. In 1 tub.
Step 2: Place a couple of 2×4’s (as spaces) in the bottom of the nu-drilled tub. Place Drilled tub on to the spacers, fill drilled tub about a third with shredded paper.
Step 3: Add crushed egg shells (great source of slow release calcium and can also act as a buffer, essentially helping to prevent excessively acidic conditions from developing.) and Cheerios (Worms like Cheerios).
Step 4: Add kitchen scraps (no meat, nothing greasy, no citrus,) veggie scraps and worms.
Step 5: Add some water. Worms like it moist and dark. Drill holes in top and leave em alone. In 90 Days you’ll have the best organic fertilizer and your plants will love you for it.
Interesting Worm Facts:
- There are over 4,000 species of earthworms.
- There are only about 6 species that are used for vermicomposting.
- Earthworms don’t have lungs, but instead breathe through their skin as long as it stays moist.
- Red Wigglers can consume up to 50% of their body weight per day
- Earthworms are hermaphrodites yet it still takes two worms to reproduce.
- Worms don’t have eyes , but are sensitive to light.
- Worms have no teeth for chewing food. They grind food in their gizzard by muscle action.
- A worm’s mouth is in the first anterior segment. There is a small protruding lip just over the mouth, called prostomium. When the worm is foraging, this lip is stretching out. The prostomium is for sensing food.
- You’ll be able to compost your kitchen scraps 10 times faster when compared to composting without them.
- One pound (16 ounces) of worms equals about 1,000 worms
- One pound of Red Wiggler worms can eat about half pound of organic matter every day.
Why should you start a Worm Farm?
- Remove excess waste from landfills & reduce your carbon footprint.
- Worms produce the best organic fertilizer
- Worm castings are five times richer in nutrients than the best topsoil and worm castings are pH neutral.
- Great treats for chickens and great for fishing.
- Worms make great friends. They just listen to you all day and never interrupt.
- If you’ve read this far, you’re crazy enough to do it.
What is Vermicomposting?
Worms and microorganisms convert organic materials to a beneficial soil amendment. The worms breakdown food scraps into nutrient rich compost.
Feed Worms:
- Vegetable scraps
- Fruit scraps and peels (mold/rot is fine)
- Bread and grains
- Coffee grounds (+ filters) and tea bags
- Crushed egg shells
- Napkins, paper towels
Don’t Feed Worms:
- Citrus
- Meats, fish
- Greasy foods
- Dairy products
- Twigs and branches
- Dog/cat feces, cat litter
You can leave the bin inside your house (there’s no smell) or you can build up a small army of worms and take over the world or just add them to your compost pile mid-summer. Or even better, start a Worm Farm (like Harry and Lloyd in ‘Dumb & Dumber‘) and call it I Got Worms.
Awesome!! I just sat down to write about compost and was thinking about worms.
Worms are amazing, just amazing creatures. I learned so much from writing this piece. Thanks for your comment!
Me too! I’m wondering if I can skip making my own compost (b/c it’s nearly too late) and just add worms before planting in my clay soil.
All I can say is AWESOME!! I love worms. I have 4 worm bins and I think starting a worm farm is a MUST. Just went to see Gasland at a local fire house – here in upstate NY. There are so many better things we can do to create abundance – like worm farming. It’s a NO BRAINER.
Great post. I have actually already built one but not got it going properly… now i feel re-inspired to give it a go! Thanks!
What’s wrong?
Erm, well, to be honest partial regret. I started it over winter and left it in the garage. It was going great, but we had a cold snap and I think it got too cold and most of the worms, errr, disappeared (I like to think went on holiday).
I need to repopulate and re-feed and give adequate attention 🙂
With hope, you could have some eggs still in your compost. Add small amounts of food like banana peels and see if anything shows up. I did a worm farm for 2 years, and the first winter I really didn’t do anything to keep them warm. Had them in a big bin outside. I was shocked to see worms come spring. If there isn’t any food to eat, the eggs will stay unhatched and their eggs can stay that way for years. Once they hatch, you’ll have 3 new worms per egg. If I remember correctly.
You rock! This is a great post!
Loved the Dumb & Dumber reference! Looking forward to seeing The Soulsby Farm grow this spring and summer…
It’s greatest piece of cinematic history we have Rhino!
Reblogged this on Godspace and commented:
Garden season is well underway. The greens are growing, the sun is shining and I am so looking forward to planting cabbages, cauliflowers and broccoli on Saturday. I have had my own worm bin for quite a while (one of those expensive kind with a tap at the bottom that is always getting clogged) and love to spread the good worm tea onto my plants. But I wanted to share this worm bin design because is simple enough that anyone could make it.
Cool! I just might try this
What great timing! We were just thinking about this and here you are with great directions and photos!! Thanks! One question–how often should you add new organic matter to the bin?
You can add a 3rd bin to the top and fill it with new organic matter. Just drill some 1/4″ holes in the bottom of the new bin and when the food is done in the worms current bin, they’ll climb up through the holes and start on the new pile of organic matter.
Will try that. It is both humerous and horrifying to think about 🙂
great idea!!
Do you have to add the spacers between the two when you add a third.
We have been dying to try this! Thanks for sharing…
Any project that you can do with cold beer in hand is great in my book!
Emily
Wow, I feel so connected right now, my 10 year old just started his worm farm for a science fair project. We just put his worm farm together two days ago. Before that, he was capturing all kinds of worms and had quite a variety, with various methods of keeping them. We thought we’d spring for worms with papers this year because he has taken such good care. Thanks for the post.
Definitely get him some worms. I found the best price on Amazon. 1,800 worms for $29.99 http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006Y6ZD3S/ref=oh_o00_s01_i00_details
Of course I always recommend shopping local first 🙂
You have inspired me to do this – especially if it can be done with a beer in one hand – haha!
[…] with worms is something you are interested in doing, find a great article on building a worm farm here. We are big fans of worms around here and their castings make a wonderful […]
Ya know, the world is a better place for having you and your family in it. A three minute project involving power tools, a cold beer, Cheerios, shredded bills and worms. Tell me what is better than that?
Worms and Cheerios, who knew!? :). Definitely going to give this a try.
Love this post. I’m curious: why include the coffee filter?
I used to be upset that my compost bin was so cool that worms thrived in it — but I have been so delighted at what the little guys produce that I don’t mind anymore. I basically have a huge worm bin near my garden! I remove shovel-fulls of beautifully composted dirt/worm castings several times a season.
It’s like cardboard or shredded paper, except its already moist and broken down. They love em!
You don’t mention anything about adding soil to the mixture with the worms. Is all they need the shredded paper, scraps, etc.? Also, I already have a compost bin going (slow), can I just add the worms to that?
You can add a handful of soil or peat. The worms came inside a big heaping pile of peat so I didn’t think they needed anymore. You can add worms to your pile (granted your temps are warm enough outdoors) I’d make them a moist little spot first with cardboard or shredded paper.
Worms, really want to feed them to the chicks in Uganda. Thank you for this informtive post!
What a great post! I put my kitchen waste in my regular (and only) compost pile, and I have lots of worms in there working all the time. There are always banana peelings, coffee grounds with filter, avacado peels, and anything that has “gone south” in the frig vegetable bin.
Cheers for that most interesting and informative post. We have been putting off initiating a worm farm because we were waiting to purchase one from Bunnings (our local large hardware chain) but this makes it a very simple and cheap process. That’s why I love this blog…you are always giving us great ideas and sharing quality information with us. A pair of penniless hippy student Tasmanian’s thank you 🙂
Nifty! I’m going to do this with the grandchildren. Nothing like building compost. Kristin
This is a great tutorial! Thanks for posting. I don’t think my wife is ready for worms quite yet, though. It took about two years to talk her into getting chickens, but ours are arriving in a few weeks. Little by little…
Thank you so much for writing an informative blog! There’s SO much education and hands on instruction in every post! I’m printing this entry out for my garden file.
This is fantastic! Hopefully this is something we’ll be able to do when we move into our house!
Great explanation. Thank you.
Jess
Awesome post. Someone at work was talking about this just two days ago. I always love your posts. They’re so practical.
Reblogged this on The Garden at 8505 and commented:
I gotta try some worm composting! This post makes it too easy to pass up.
This is great! Can I reblog this on my page?
Absolutely! Thank You
I have officially started the wormery, but my worms keep trying to crawl out… is this normal?
If the worms are leaving, something isn’t quite right. A friend of mine had that problem…she was feeding the worms rabbit poop which is usually a safe bet, but these rabbits were being fed commercial food that had a heavy salt content.
I got into trouble one time with too much water. I was following a recipe of adding so much water to so much paper. It might be fine in a drier climate, but on the Oregon Coast, we get 60″ of rain a year. My bin turned anaerobic and it smelled like raw sewage. I had to air it out much to the dismay of my family. Don’t get it too wet. Having said that, I know if you soak cardboard in water, then tear it into strips, they love that. Another thing they love is pumpkins. There were a couple of years I’d go around and ask people for their pumpkins after Halloween. I got a bunch! Then I’d slab them in half or quarters and lay them meat down. The worms will bunch up underneath and just groove on it until the pumpkin shell is paper thin. I love it.
One more thing I just thought of…if you’re getting horse manure or cow manure, you want to know if the owners are worming their animals, because that worming ‘medicine’ can last for some time and can kill beyond the time it’s in the animal, if you get my meaning…
Worm regards.
Pat
This is great! I will have to show this to my Manfriend, he is starting a compost bin right now made out of milk crates.
I’ve nominated your blog for a “Very Inspiring Blogger Award” because I love what you’re doing at Soulby Farm. Please stop by to accept you award. Castings of Cheer to you 🙂
*anna
Now THIS is a comprehensive guide. Thank you.
Robert
What fun!
Reblogged this on wevcore and commented:
Great post from another blogger, check it out:
this was so helpful…I have been farming for 3 years now and the last 2 years have been organic. I use diamonacous earth Food grade to ward off pests and I plant onions in with some of my crops -they keep the bugs at bay. I have used horse manure as a fertilizer but thought I’d try alpaca poop this year-my neighbor has some and said I could help myself. I always wanted to try composting and now that I read your post I reallllyyyy want to try it! Thanks for such an easy and informative post. Can’t wait to get started! You are welcome to check out my blog at http://www.eatinginthebuff,com
I read your story Dan and I think what you did is what more people should do! Many blessings sent to you and your lovely family, Great work Jake chasing those deer away! 🙂
Whoo Hoo! Fantastic Idea!!!
I started my own worm farm two weeks ago and already have 6″ of compost! I was absolutely floored when I checked on the little fellas! Mine are currently outside until it gets too hot. I made it out of concrete blocks and it measures approximately 4’W x 4’D x 3’H. Yeah, it’s a worm castle. 🙂
You make it seem so easy… I’ll have to look into it.
I’ve had one in my garage for a few years. I use the liquid fertilizer to water my orchids, african violets and other house plants. The dogwoods and silverbells are in bloom, daffodils, tulips are finishing up and the iris just starting. Usually my Starwoman is the first to bloom, but Cat’s eyes a red that I have in my Deshler High section (our school colors are red & white) of the driveway is blooming & some of the dwarf ones such as Dot com are blooming. My Auburn section is on the other side of the DW in orange daylilies & blue iris.
I knew nothing about this. This is one of the coolest things I’ve read.
this is an excellent tutorial on worm farming, we have two big worm farms in the basement and soon I will be making up the fertiliser and spraying it on the fields and gardens. The fields just love this stuff and it is so easy to apply! c
how do you make the fertilizer into a spray? Would love to know! 🙂
It’s funny – everything you’ve been posting about (raising chickens, vermicomposting) I have been reading about recently!
Great minds huh?
Thanks for stopping by our blog, Our Prairie Nest: A Simple Life. Your site looks great and we LOVE this posting on vermiculture. It’s absolutely on our “to do” list!
Blessings,
Mama Hen & Flock
hehe – they listen to you all day!! they sure do 🙂 awww i miss the worms I had in Calgary!
great post 🙂
Great post! Luckily for us, our city picks up our compost. But, I think when the kids are a little older this would be a great project for them. (Thanks also for liking my “Luscious Lemons!” post.) Looking forward to reading your future posts!
This is the most useful thing I’ve read in a long time. Thank you!
Very interesting and thorough! My husband won’t let me throw the coffee filters into the compost heap – he insists they won’t break down, I say they will. I’m right, right?
Thanks for the Polloplayer like!
You are right!
What a fantastic post! So inspiring!
I love this! I’m going to link it in my own blog entry about the importance of compost for planting tomatoes and general gardening if that’s OK 🙂
Absolutely! Thank You!
[…] More info on worms, composting, and more! https://soulsbyfarm.wordpress.com/2012/03/22/lets-build-a-worm-farm/ […]
Thanks for liking my post. I would love to start exploring options to buy local, seasonal produce. However, I went to the Dallas Farmers Market yesterday and was sorely disappointed to find almost no local produce. It was basically grocery store produce, marked up. I live in North Texas (Dallas area), would love to hear your suggestions.
BTW, nice blog and great posts.
Reblogged this on Real Life Farm Wife and commented:
I have wanted to get into vermicompositng for a long time. According to this great blog article – all I really need to buy are the worms!
Don’t order your red wigglers, you can go to a bait shop and get them a fifth of what you paid for the 2 lbs.
Local bait shops sell a dozen for $2 (.166ea). Even if they gave you a deal, there’s no way they can come close to selling you 2,000 worms for $29 or .014ea I checked….
Not in Alabama.. I bought mine by the pound.
oh I avoid feeding mine onions or garlic left overs as it stinks up my garage. Those go into my outside compost bin.
So simple – I’m ordering my worms tonight! I’ve been wanting to do this for awhile, and this post makes me feel like I could finally do it. I was weeding out the back plot of our yard four weeks ago or so, and lazily put all of the weeds with a bit of the soil into a large garbage bin. Then I realized it was too heavy, so we left it for awhile in a dark shed until I had time to go through it, which was today. I found several earthworms in there, and the soil that was left was unusually fine and crumbly – I doubt it’s all vermicompost, but I think that they must have eaten through some of it.
What can you tell me about eggshells? I’ve heard they are useful for worm reproduction, of all things. Thanks!
[…] The Soulsby Farm blog Has a real bang up posting on Vermicomposting: Composting with Worms. They provide all the details on constructing your worm bin, care and feeding of your worms and, Grin, a lot of useful and interesting information on worms. It is well worth your time to ‘look’ and read this short posting. […]
At some point when my boys are a bit older I think they will be all over this!
Hello Soulsby Farm and followers, it rained 2 straight days here. This morning I went to check the lettuce seedlings at the garden and found 2 small holes on the leaf. There was also a worm with many feet that drowned in the water. Will my plant still live? Should I cut the portion with holes and the leaves will survive? Any advice to rehabilitate?
I posted the photo in my blog at the bottom of the page. Thank you in advance!
http://hungrytourist.wordpress.com/2012/03/24/planting-growing-herbs-at-home/
As long as the bugs are gone, the plant should grow new leaves and you should be fine.
Thank you!
I’ve been trying to get my daughter more interested in agriculture and such, so this will be a great blog for reference. I hope she doesn’t get too squeamish over worms. 😉
Excellent article I am in Australia just coming into winter and have had a full season of worms my gardens are looking fabulous Worms farms are great
Hello Soulsby. Thanks for visiting my site and liking my post “A Little Kind of Funk.” I love your photos and very lovely blog. I’m inspired to make a worm compost this spring but have a question: Are they critter proof as in raccoons and rats?
Pretty much… They get left alone as long as the top is secured.
Hey there – Thanks for liking my post!
I enjoyed this post about worm farms. Your photos were magnificent and the step by step layout was so common-sense that even if you didn’t know english, you could probably easily follow the procedure. I look forward to more lovely posts.
Reblogged this on Raw Life Wizard … – One man's journey of natural healing, spirituality, and raw food juicing. and commented:
Nice post from Soulsby Farm on how to build your own Worm Farm.
I’ve read on vermicomposting before, an liked the idea. Only one question… I know you have the worm-scraps ratio, but for a single guy who eats mostly fruits and vegetables, how many worms should I get? I’m thinking a pound should be more than enough, but wanted to make sure. Thanks for the inspiring blog!
Thank Paul – love reading your articles and putting them into practise.
You could start off with a pound of Red Wiggles, depending on much you eat would determine how many worms you’d need. You can always add to your existing farm.
sounds great! Thanks for the quick response!
Hi! This is awesome!
I work for a library in the kids department and the summer 2013 reading program theme is all about underground.
Would a worm farm work with a clear bin so the kids could see what is going on?
If so, this would be a great working display.
You could but just keep it in a dark area. Though blind, worms are sensitive to light.
Thanks.
This looks so easy, I want to give it a try. We compost but have such a lazy compost pile it always takes forever and comes out pretty chunky. 🙂
[…] The Soulsby Farm blog Has a real bang up posting on Vermicomposting: Composting with Worms. They provide all the details on constructing your worm bin, care and feeding of your worms and, Grin, a lot of useful and interesting information on worms. It is well worth your time to ‘look’ and read this short posting. […]
found you on town and country gardening…adding you to my blog list…on verdigrass.blogspot.com
will find local redworms in my compost pile, i saw a lot of wrigglers which can be enslaved in a cozy basement atmosphere..in buckets which already had holes from a tree transplanting project..got lots of corrugated cardboard.
i am glad to be able to use the filters and tea bags as they are so slow in the compost piles..
now on to explore the rest of your welcome ideas..
Very well done! You did a great job organizing this so others could do it too!
We’ve been worm farmers for years. It’s the absolute easiest way to compost – the worms do all the work!
And how much fun is it to tell people you’re a worm farmer? I bet lots of fun!
I like to just say, “hey, don’t throw that banana peel away, I’ll feed it to my worms.”
Thanks for sharing. I can’t wait to give this a go!
Hi .. I love your comment about worms listening, ha ha ha ! I made a worm bin over a month ago .. and was given some worms. I keep the container outside, through the winter ..and they survived. Good to hear these good stories.
Beware: cats like playing with worms. Worms may also panic in thumderstroms and crawl out of bin all over kitchen, horrifying roommates. (Hmmm… perhaps I should have shared what was in the bin on the shelves under the houseplants…) But, yes, a well-maintained wormbin can be completely unnoticed, even by those who live with it. Until the worms escape.
I can’t wait to do this. I think I even have two old Rubbermaid bins in the back of our storage unit.
Reblogged this on yearofhealthierliving and commented:
I was going to write a post about vermiculture or composting using earthworms, but another blog, The Soulsby Farm did such a great job, I’m going to send you to their site. This is a project Ellie wants to do–maybe this weekend, if we get really motivated. The thought of worms in my house makes me a little squeemish, but I’m told they are very well behaved and not smelly at all.
[…] Build a Worm Farm! https://soulsbyfarm.wordpress.com/2012/03/22/lets-build-a-worm-farm/ Share this:ShareTwitterFacebookLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. Leave a Comment by […]
Reblogged this on Lilacs and Linens and commented:
I was going to post something like this sometime this week. And look! The Soulsby Farm already did a fantastic job. So why mess with perfection?
I think I put too much soil in my pans-filled halfway with dirt before adding leaves,cheerios, and fruit scraps. Is there anyway to remove some of the dirt without removing the worms? I am afraid there will be no room for the new compost.
Too much dirt. A handful would be plenty…and pans won’t really keep the worms in one place for very long. If you’re not covering it, it could attract other pests.
Okay so I am off to get a some bins then and I guess I need to sive through the dirt to remove worms and get rid of most of the dirt! Thanks Dan! Thanks for visiting my fb page! 🙂
I too had trouble with my worm bin in the past… and mine did STINK, because, well, I managed to over water them, or something, and they all died. GAG. It has been long enough that the horror of the incident is not so overwhelming, so I guess I should try it again. I like your no spout design, because the spouts do get clogged!
Thanks for visiting the Farmlet today, Lynda 🙂
You have had lots of good feedback re worm farms and everyone trying their hand at them – I actually sell them have a look
I poured alot of water in the bin…geesh I hope I didn’t kill them!
Totally doing this. Where’d you get your worms?
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006Y6ZD3S/ref=oh_o00_s01_i00_details
Is there anything that Amazon doesn’t sell? LOL! ~ L
“…with a beer in one hand” made me giggle. Such a great post! It’s getting popular over on Pinterest! 😉
I saw that. It’s be re-pinned like 70+ times. That’s so cool!
Great post! I first saw worms at work when I hiked five miles up to the Hike Inn in North Georgia. They have several of these there. I am not at all fond of worms but could possibly make an exception for this.
So, inspiring! I want to do this at some point and will be coming right back here when I decide to get started!
[…] Price Worm Factory DS5TT 5-Tray Worm Composter – Terra Cotta ReviewsWhy I Love Worm CompostingLet’s Build a Worm Farm! .recentcomments a{display:inline !important;padding:0 !important;margin:0 […]
[…] Here is a great and super simple quick worm farm tutorial. The best part? The beer. […]
I only bought a small container which had around 15-20 so I need more worms that that?
I only purchased a small container of around 20 worms. Is that enough or should I get more?
You need more. Maybe a pound (1,000) for a small worm farm. How big is your container?
The same size as the one you have on this page! I guess it’s back to the feed store!
Reblogged this on Mountainmom52's Blog and commented:
For easy instructions on how to make your own worm farm this is so easy! Everyone let’s make a worm farm!!
Reblogged this on Eating in the Buff-Confessions of a Raw Foodie and commented:
For easy instructions on how to make your own worm farm this is so easy! Everyone let’s make a worm farm!!
Had to reblog this on my blog Eating in the Buff! Thanks for following me! I can’t wait to see what my worm can do!
Awesome, Thank You!
Love the directions and info on making a worm bin. Time to do it again. Thanks.
Wonderful post, and blog! I might ask my son if he would like to make one of these. He needs a hobby. I don’t know if he will be interested, but I think it would be fun. A friend of mine raises worms. He’s always trying to get me to so I can sell them. Very good that you put all the instructions up for folks! Thank you.
Really kewl. I’m going to do this with my son! Have a great day. 🙂
Reblogged this on justalittlecracked and commented:
I love getting feedback from other blogs because then I find their blog as well. Very happy when I find one that can inspire and teach me new things. This is one of those blogs.
Got my bins and brought home a big bag of shredded paper from work.
Now I need to get some worms – anywhere online that you recommend?
Yes, scroll up about 12 comments and you’ll see an Amazon link and big ‘ol picture of worms 🙂
glad you found my blog so i could find yours! i’m definitely going to try out this worm farm contraption, it looks awesome! i’ve been on the hunt for just this kind of composting method–quick, easy, and less-mess. thanks!
I got a wormery for Christmas – best pressie in ages!
Christine
This is great! I’m going to try this. I read the comment and reply about adding additional compost to another top bin…can you do that perpetually? That is, can you take the original drilled bin from underneath after your second batch of compost, put it on top, and keep alternating? Is there a point where you need to replenish your worm supply? What do you do in the winter? LOL That’s a lot of questions! Sorry, I’m a worm composting newbie. 🙂
They like squash shells too. Put them in upside down and they’ll group up underneath especially in the winter.
Reblogged this on bentleysgarden and commented:
This week’s feature courtesy of the Soulsby Farm!
Are these worms the good type, or if they get loose are they the invasive type they are having problems with in certain parts of the country? I am really excited about this, but I want to be careful with invasives of any kind.
Red Wigglers have already invaded North America. They arrived with the early European settlers. The Europeans also brought the common earth worms! If you live in an area that does not already have red wigglers it is likely they would not survive the local climate very long. Red wigglers are the infamous “dung worm” found crawling through farm animal feces such as horse and cow – they prefer horse manure. Concerns of introduction to a foreign environment can be alleviated by limiting farming to compost bins. They will be the quiet and easiest care pets you’ve ever owned. Red wiggler worm castings provide five times the nutritional content of an equivalent mass of regular garden soil.
I’ve tried worm farming in the past but I always end up with way too many other bugs moving in and my good worms disapear. Any ideas how to keep other creepy crawlies out?
Love this! I grew up playing with worms after it rain but now I live in Florida and I don’t see any worms in my garden. Call me stupid but, the worms that are used for fishing could also be used in the garden? Cuz, I can get those down the street. How do I reblog this? if you don’t mind.
Reblogged this on backtubasic and commented:
A great idea!
I have helped dozens of teachers start classroom worm farms to let students compost their lunch waste in exactly this way. This is a great description of how to do it, with clear instructions and fantastic photos. Keep up the great work!
Great post! You’ve totally inspired me to start a wormery in addition to my usual composting, if I can get hold of some of the right worms out here. I’ve not seen them for sale in any of the farmshops. Wonder if Amazon deliver them here? Hmmm… Off to investigate now.
Nice post! I have a worm farm and it has been going for about a year. Now, I just need to figure out how to sort the castings from the worms. There’s seems to be no easy way other than to do it by hand….
You can build a screen frame, about 2 x 3 ft, 1/8″ hardware cloth, hook it up to an electric motor that vibrates…probably by fastening an ‘eccentric’ on the shaft of the motor. I’ve seen this in action. A small bucket of worms and compost gets dumped while its vibrating, the compost goes into a tray below and the worms stay on the screen because they can’t position themselves vertically to drop thru. You gather them up and repeat the process. You can also buy a screen ‘tunnel’ version of that for an obscene price. Other than that, do the ‘cone’ method on a sunny day, which takes hours.
Hope this helps.
[…] thanks to The Soulsby Farm for offering a free tutorial about how to start a worm farm! I was wondering how I would afford enough fertilizer to keep a […]
I happened to google Holcromb Worm bin http://www.wormpost.com/wormbins/continuous_flow.html
This is a bin I built from plans about 10 years ago. I wrote a little piece about it back then for Worm Digest. Lo and behold, there’s my picture on the web site standing beside my worm bin. That was a surprise.
This type of bin has a kind of wired bottom so the compost falls below and you can scoop it out without disturbing the main contents.
Sent from my iPod. Please excuse any typing errors. Bad spellers of the world UNTIE!
Very cool information — one of the many reasons I have nominated you for the Versatile Blogger Award. http://nittygrittydirtman.wordpress.com/2012/04/04/extra-extra-weed-all-about-it/
Cheers!
Something about Facebook and typing comments that makes bad typers out of us.
I’ve been wanting to do this, but didn’t know how to get it started. Thank you so much for posting it!
great for schools too …it was just part of the green living prog. urban but was nice to expose our kids to how i grew up …and the bees …in defense of stingers ( :
Great weekend project! I’m there!! Thank you.
Great post! I’ve been curious about doing this. We know someone in an apartment who had a little worm farm under her kitchen sink. Don’t know what she did with the compost, though! And the best price is on Amazon, you say? Wow, you can get anything on Amazon.
Nice summary. Thanks. I want to get a worm farm going for my class. Will try your method.
Thanks for stopping by to “Like” our gardening post on our blog. Great info on the worms and composting. I sent it to our friends who are Community Garden members, in hopes they will share it with all of the members there. Look forward to more info from you on gardening!
Susan and Wade
What a great write up! I actually have a compost pile near the vegetable garden and it is now producing some great compost, and nature has taken care of adding the worms for me! Love what you did here! Thanks too for the like on my blog!
Dang it! I have a million things to do on our little dairy, and now I want to do this too. But with 3 minutes (and I even get to have a beer?) I’m going for it.
I would like to build up to enough worms that I can release them regularly into our larger compost pile (already a worm magnet, but the more the merrier!).
Thanks for the great, simple, creative, inspiring post. I’m sharing. 🙂
We did this yesterday for a practical science fair project!! So easy. Reblogged it!
Reblogged this on fairlightfun and commented:
Now that we are renters a compost was something I thought lost to us. Not any more!! This is a super easy project that you can do in seriously 30 minutes tops. We did a 2 birds 1 stone thing and also are using it for one of my sons green Science Fair project at the end of the month. Try it and get messy;)
Loved your worm farm post.. Used to do that when we lived in our house but it’s kind of hard to carry around a bin of worms in an RV. Recycling of any sort is difficult when your on the road. Every state has different rules so we unfortunately often end up throwing it all out. Next week will be doing a post called My Inner Farmer, hope you have time to check it out. Keep up the good work, will drop into your blog regularly.
Ruth from At Home on the Road
Hello Soulsby Farmers. Thank you very much for liking the post on my blog…and I really really love the wormery – just the thing for my London garden!
This time of year on the Oregon Coast it still rains which brings many worms out to the dirt road we take our walks on. Sometimes I’ll decide to save these guys from SADS…(Sudden Auto Death Syndrome) I’ll take an index card and scoop them into a cottage cheese container. Much easier than trying with your fingers. They’re not Eisenia Fetida, but hey, you’re giving them the opportunity to ‘feed and breed.’ What’s not to like? I’ve gotten up to 250 worms this way.
My kids have always had a strange obsession with worms – they love collecting them while I’m ‘diggin in the dirt’. I’m gonna hafta try a worm farm!
this article is awesome! there is so much waste involved in school lunches that i would like to introduce this project to my son’s school. and of course, our kitchen. i really like that they do not produce a smell and can be kept handy inside… :)Monica
Thanks for the worm farm how-to! I love night crawlers & always rescue them after rainstorms, replanting them on my veggies & flowers in pots!
Thanks also for stopping by my Post today!
Thank yu smuch for stoppin by my blog http://smallhouseunderabigsky.wordpress.com I appreciate your visit! I jumped on your blog as well to check it out and LOVE your current topics, worm farm, composting and keeping chickens. They all get me pretty excited too! We are big composters on our mini 5-acre “farmette” re-using old wood pallets as our compost pile. We mulch the garden beds heavily as well and find the worms LOVE that as well. Isn’t Mother Nature a perfect balance when we just stay out of her way and assist with a light hand!
Please stop by again when you can. I appreciate your interest.
Small House / Big Sky Donna
Reblogged this on enli10.
wow, I see you have some serious wormers over here! my little story is pretty wimpy in comparison! thanks for liking my mountain of worms story!
would it be easier to have it inside or outside, i have two large dogs and a two year old son. also any specifics on how much i should use of everything, and your tubs above are 5 gal, right? One more question on the no citrus part, that means like no orange peels, etc. Just bananas, apple cores, etc?
Inside or outside it’s fine. As long as it is done correctly, there will be no smell but the worms do make a break for it sometimes.I think the tubs are about 10 gal…. And yes, no citrus….uncooked veggies, coffee grounds, etc… they love. Good Luck!
Oh my. I want to do this, but my 5-year-old would think it is a bin full of pets for him!
Great post! I intended to start a worm farm last summer. After buying worm castings for my raised veggie bed this year, and stumbling upon your post, I’m starting my own worm ranch. Round ’em up!
Great article: I shall have to put it into practice!
Alright. I have thought about this post every day since it showed up in my email. Would you make any changes to your original bin or are you happy with how it’s going? I’m going to have to make this happen soon.
This is great information – I’m going to do this. Thanks!
I enjoyed your post and it reminded me of a friend of mine who went to a farm to buy some worms. She said to the old fellow who sold her the worms, “I hope the worms will be happy with me”. He said, “vurms ist always happy”. Thanks for stopping by my blog!
Perfect; my husband will love this – esp w/ the beer in one hand!! Great post, nice site, and thanks so much for liking my “old farm shed” post.
Very interesting, I may have to give this a try! Thanks for following my blog!
Awesome post! Now…would the earthworms that I have all over the yard work here? Around here, they get almost as big as garden snakes. When I find them I put them in the garden. Would it work if I found enough of them to put into this composter?
Thinking I’m going to do this. My daughter said she wanted to do a garden and maybe her area needs a good food to start it all of right!
This is great! I tried worms in a tri-level worm bin a few years ago, and things seemed to be going well, and I went out one day and they were all dead. Quite a shock, and wasn’t sure what I did wrong. Also the spigot for the liquid compost always got clogged till it broke entirely. This blog makes me want to give it a try.
I’ll soon be giving up the nice “worm condo” I had borrowed from a friend. Fortunately someone else in MY condo is also worm farming but I’ll miss the convenience and aeration of the tri-level.
Reblogged this on threefatesfiber.
Great article and I love the humor you sprinkle around. Worms are so easy to raise, easiest “pets” to have! Thanks for checking out my blog as well.
[…] the directions from Soulsby Farms. Share this:TwitterFacebookLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. This entry was posted in […]
[…] the directions from Soulsby Farms. Share this:TwitterFacebookLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. This entry was posted in […]
The day you ‘liked’ my blog post ‘Transitioning to a Sustainable, Life-enhacing, Ethical Business’ I had just made a wormery. Spooky !!
These look like clear instructions with excellent explanation.
Thanks
Thanks for this I’m definitely trying this! I’m new to composting/ fertilizing and this makes it seem very easy!
how do they tolerate heat? In our four month stretch of agonizing heat , I’m worried about them poaching in there…
How’s everyones worm farms going? mine are doing just great, I sell worms on ebay for 29.99 if anyone wants some……
Love it!
A friend of mine (in our very cold winter climate) keeps her red wigglers alive all winter. Two secrets: cement bloks around the base of the compost for heat sink, and bags of leavel stack on top. The worms will even eat up through the bags into the leaves!
Wow! I’m from Ohio. Dayton to be exact. This is a great post with simple, clear, and funny instructions. Saw you had liked two of my posts, so I came by to check you out. I’m going to share this on my Blog Facebook page. Really great info, thanks for sharing!
http://www.themahoganyway.wordpress.com
Great post! A friend of mine used to have a terrific worm farm. HIs method was similar to yours, except instead of cheerios, he fed them leftover cooked oatmeal, which they loved.
[…] Reblogged from The Soulsby Farm: […]
Reblogged on http://beltramineighborhood.wordpress.com/ to share with all our neighborhood gardeners! Thanks for such a great post!
I have got all the retired men in the street building worm farms!!! quite a challenge since none of them knew anything about worms and have no patience. I think your blog with a beer in one hand sealed the deal for me.
[…] late in the year to get started. However, I saw this post on The Soulsby Farm about building a worm farm and I was curious to know what I was doing wrong. If I was doing anything right. Immediately I am […]
Reblogged this on homesbyjim and commented:
Great gardening idea for super compost.
Great article. Great for the environment and fun as well.
Reblogged this on Karen Soucie Belloise and commented:
I tried composting last year in the corner of my yard and it didn’t go to well. These guys makes it look so easy I can’t wait to try it again.
I have a question: In your post you say that you can use fruit scraps, but no citrus. I’m assuming this means bananas, apples, berries, etc are fine, but no orange or lemon peels? Or are the peels fine, and just not the fleshy part?
No citrus anything; peels, fruit, ect… Banana peels are good so are the other fruits you mentioned.
I was working with my Monstera plant and potting new cuttings and I came across a fat worm in my dirt. I think it liked the coffee grinds I got from Strarbucks that I add to my soil mix. Enjoy your blog.
Reblogged this on Valerie Kingsbury and commented:
What an interesting and delightful post!
I apologize if this has already been asked. So many comments that I didn’t read them all.
What happens as they multiply and you don’t have enough scraps to feed them all? I want just a compost for my garden and not to start a business selling them. What would I do with worm overflow from too many worms? If I put them in the garden wouldn’t they eat the plants? Signed, confused.
LOL (By the way, I love your sense of humor. I’m still chuckling about your name suggestion for a company called “I got worms”
Too cute!
Valerie, thought I would weigh in. Earthworms are beneficial for your garden, as they stay in the soil (they HATE the light), churning it up and creating air for roots. They do not eat your garden. But you do not use ordinary earthworms for vermicomposting. Red Wigglers are what you want. They’ll die if you feed them too much. Also, keep the bin 60-80F degrees. I made the mistake of letting the bin get too warm. Check out this article, and others. http://goarticles.com/article/Vermicomposting-Tips-Knowing-the-best-Composting-Worms/2138472/
We have several worm farms in old baths…I’ve found that citrus is not a problem…as a rule of thumb, we add any raw vegetative material, but no meat or animal produce that could go rancid…I tell everyone that I’ve got worms and some people get it!
Reblogged this on Livinginpeaceproject's Blog and commented:
Great Guide for Building a Worm Farm
Have wanted to do this forever. . .Thanks for the likes on my blog!
Excellent post. I shared it on my Facebook link. Thanks for the like on my photography blog today and in the past. Appreciate it!
I started composting several years ago. The earthworms in Blairsville, Georgia quickly found my compost and we have been close friends ever since. I now have thousands of worms creating the richest soil for my flower and vegetable gardens year round. The best part is the worms work for table scraps.
Barbara Stanley
http://www.examiner.com/natural-health-in-Atlanta/barbarastanley
I also wanted to thank you for finding my blog on mini vacations on family farms. All farms in America need the support of others. Big government is doing all it can to squeeze out the family-owned farms and co-ops. I shudder to think of the consequences. Great article, BTW.
Barbara
I tried this once. I see what I did wrong now, I didn’t use cheerios. 🙂
Thanks for visiting my blog (midihideaways.wordpress.com) and in turn introducing me to yours. I love this post on worm composting, I knew there should be an easy and inexpensive way of doing this and now I know how!! this is definitely going on my to-do list – many thanks!!
Your post has reminded me that I got gifted a worm farm kit which is sitting in my laundry sans worms….must get to that. Thanks for the tips!
Great post! We’re building a greenhouse as I type (well, maybe not right EXACTLY as I type), and have a compost pile. We throw everything except animal products in it. I’ve wanted to try a worm farm for at least a year, but never got around tuit (now I have one). Since I have no idea what I’m about to do, I gotta ask (shows I didn’t read all the comments) – what do I do with the compost with the worms in it? Do I just keep filling it up and use the water that comes off, or what?? Once again, my colossal ignorance amazes me. Thanks for the help!!
[…] getting your worms, you should prepare their worm home. The instructions are here, courtesy of The Soulsby Farm very small farm in […]
Well, we just started ours, fingers crossed now.
Reblogged this on My Feng Shui Garden and commented:
Great article by The Soulsby Farm Sustainable farming, Permaculture, Gardening and Homesteading in Ohio
Excellent post! I’d already printed off some lengthy (8 pages!) instructions on how to get a worm farm started. You’ve managed to spell it out concisely in a much shorter post, and with some great photos. Thanks! (Thanks for the visit and “like” on my post too) Sheri
I’ve been wanting to start a worm compost – this makes it seem much more approachable. Can it do without the eggshells? We’re vegan and don’t have any eggshells around. Thanks!
Thanks for visiting my new blog SeedsOnFertileSoil. I heard of your Farm in the news at some point and when I saw your profile photo, I even recognized you so I stopped by. Anyway……love the post on the worm bin. I have 6 books on vermiculture and if I were to sum them all up in a succinct, funny way, it would probably not be quite as awesome as your post…but close. Keep on spreading the word that worms and dirt and hard work is fun! -Caryn
[…] to share some photos of our box here, but if you want step by step instructions, head on over to Soulsby Farm, there are excellent instructions there, plus he has a great sense of […]
Wow, Interesting indeed. And,so many comments from so many people. You hit a nerve! The gardens here have plenty of worms, but one could always use more! You might enjoy some of the photos of the gardens here on the shores of Lake MIchigan. They do inspire me and the visitors. See: http://www.gardensatwaterseast.blogspot.com I will have to check in more often. Jack
Great post. I had only ever seen the expensive worm farms that are on sale. Good to see one can also build one at little cost and in just 3 minutes. I like the “If you’ve read this far, you’re crazy enough to do it”!
Reblogged this on Akron Planeteers and commented:
Check out The Soulsby Farm’s article on Building a Worm Farm!
This is a great blog very informative. I don’t live on a farm just a small surburban lot but I have two worm farms. One at the back and one at the front. We feed them all our scraps and they eat us out of house and home. My garden loves their waste products so it’s a win win. We have less rubbish to go to the council dump and we have a nice garden. It is something everyone can do to help the planet. No matter how small an area they live in.
I am a follower of yours now and I look forward to your next post. cheers Judy:)
judysp.wordpress.com
P.S. Thank you for liking my blog I appreciate your support
Reblogged this on My Life is really in the Garden and commented:
Excellent information on worm composting, especially on what to feed these beneficial composters!
Good morning .. I find the list of what to “feed” the red wigglers is very helpful! And .. drum roll .. I’ve “reblogged” this on my site! My first “reblog” .. 🙂
[…] worm bin, sans worms. We followed these directions. I must admit, it took us a little longer than 3 minutes, even without a beer in one hand. Mainly, […]
just took my kids on a field trip this morning to a local hospital to see their worm composting system. kept thinking on the ride home that I need to start one here. btw ~ love that they really enjoy bill collection notices, lol!
Dan I had this Brilliant idea to put a garbage can with the bottom cut out to put my compost in.http://teachingdavidtocook.com/2012/05/08/worm-bin-weekend/ To make a long story short, I put it in the sun and it’s not working. Looks like I need to make one of your worm bins. Thanks for all the great information, l’m looking forward to following you.
Thanks for the inspiration. I’ve actually started my own thanks to your help.
[…] a great and much more humorous job of documenting it. So, when in doubt–outsource. Check out Let’s Build A Worm Farm! at Soulsby Farm’s blog. This post wouldn’t be complete without one gross picture of […]
Since I read this far, so I must be crazy enough to do it! Haha — I think you are right! Great post, and also thanks for stopping by. One question: can worms be kept outside year-round, i.e., if I live in a snowy winter climate do they need to come inside?
Love this post, I’d like to try this to make worms for my chickens!
By the way, do you have any suggestions for what could be used other than Cheerios? I am trying to avoid buying anything that is GMO.
A great informative post. I also live on a small farm but in South Africa. We have been using worms for the last 4 years and found them very good. The liquid that comes from the bottom is very good for new areas of soil as it puts the micro nutriments into the soil. They sell it in the local shops as ” Worm Pee” 🙂
So, your instructions explain why our worms dwindled in our container mulch bin– I quit feeding them. Easy to begin again! My chicks love them.
I never in a million years thought I would say this about worms, but….this looks fun! My son and I will have to look into this, it seems right up his alley!
Wonderfully informative! Thanks for visiting my blog and sending encouragement. I’m wondering how warm the worms need to stay. I noticed above that somebody’s worms died because he left them in a cold garage.
I really enjoyed this! And what’s more, it sounds do-able for a city chick like me. We also have little yard space, so this would work.
Awesome step by step instructions! Thank you. I’m just curious if you collect the liquid run off that seeps through the holes at the bottom? Apparently those are super good for plants too. My little earthworm farm is really archaic and thrown together. 😉
[…] Let's Build a Worm Farm!. […]
Glad you came by. I get to read about the real things. Be well.
Love this! No more buying of worm castings for the Garden!
I have just started keeping my own worms so this post was very helpful. Thanks for the tip about the Cheerios!
Reblogged this on Caliche Challenge and commented:
Cool Post on vermicomposting.
This post was extremely helpful. I have a small compost on my porch that I just started. I actually found a container at the thrift store that was already full of holes because I knew it needed air but I wasn’t sure how to work worms into the equation. You made it easy for me to understand. Thank you!
Thanks for your personal marvelous posting!
I definitely enjoyed reading it, you will be a great author.
I will remember to bookmark your blog and will come back down
the road. I want to encourage one to continue your great writing, have a nice
evening!
Speechless with the tremendous post. I was starting to gather information on how to make my own worm farm…
I’ve notice that I’ve been connected with worms since I was a kid but just lately got the time to make it a hobby creating farm worm.
How do you stop them from going out the holes in the bottom. Like mine do?