Worm Farming Secrets

Worm Farming Secrets will show you how easy it is to get into Worm composting — also known as viticulture. Worm Farming Secrets likes to use Red Worms for composting, they can tolerate a wide range of temperatures, can process organic materials like newspapers, yard waste, fruits and vegetables very quickly creating extremely powerful fertilizer for plants, that your worms can turned into nutrient rich castings. These castings can be used as plant food and are an extremely powerful fertilizer for plants. If you would like an all-natural fertilizer then vermicomposting is perfect for you. For those that have gardens or even potted plants, homegrown compost is a great way to feed and nurture plants.

Worm Farming Secrets, Free News Letter will show how easy it is to step up a worm farm. Once your worm farm is set up you can order your worms, a 1,000 Count Red Wiggler Worms are around $30.00. With your worms eating your free kitchen scraps and multiplying it won’t be long before you have a lot of worms. Worm Farming Secrets will show you How to successfully market and sell your live bait to other fishermen, bait shops and hobby shops for profit. Don’t forget also your worms waste is gardening gold for your plants and garden or to sell to others.

Have you been to the Bait store lately and see how much bait shops charge for 12 worms, usually in poor health.  Just think while you are making money with your worm farm, you will also have an endless supply of Fat Healthy Worms for fishing. Successful fishermen know that there’s just no substitute for live bait when it comes to catching more and bigger fish.

The following is a list of just a few of the topics covered in the Worm Farming Secrets newsletter. This newsletter is a must if you’re planning to start garden composting or maybe your own worm farm this year. Worm Farming Secrets Newsletter is Step-by-step instructions to build a low cost, highly productive worm farm or wormery to supply your garden with a year round supply of worm compost.

Worm Casting Tea

 Worm Farming Secrets worm tea is worm castings “poop” which have been soaked in water and oxygenated. The extra oxygen causes a bloom of the good bacteria, plus the added benefit of nitrogen, phosphate, calcium, magnesium and potash.  The liquid that drains out of a worm composting bin is very nutrient-rich and your houseplants and garden will love it! The following is a list of just a few of the topics covered in the Worm Farming Secrets newsletter. This newsletter is a must if you’re planning to start garden composting or maybe your own worm farm this year. Worm Farming Secrets Newsletter is Step-by-step instructions to build a low cost, highly productive worm farm or wormery to supply your garden with a year round supply of worm compost.

Keep Worms In The Dark

 Worm Farming secrets says to choose a bin made of material that is made of a solid material not transparent. Keep a lid on your bin to prevent any light from entering. Red worms have no eyes and cannot see they use light-sensitive skin cells concentrated at the front end of their bodies to sense light and move away from it. If your container is kept dark You’re worms will feed on the surface and stay active.


Worm Bedding

Start your worm farm with some shredded newspaper, moistened, not wet. Add a couple of handfuls of soil, not potting soil, and a couple of crushed egg shells make sure the eggshells have been cooked before putting them in your worm farm. If they are not from boiled eggs, you can cook them by putting them in a cup of water in the microwave.  The one property the bedding material must have is the ability to absorb water. Worms need a moist environment—their bodies consist of 70 to 90 percent water. Moist bedding allows your worms to stay comfortable.

Feeding The Worms

 Worms are not picky when it comes to food, as they eat many of the same items you do. They like fruit, vegetables, grains, pasta, bread and even oatmeal. They also like newspapers and yard waste just to mention a few.

How Much Can a Worm Eat

The general rule of thumb is worms can eat about half their weight in food per day. This means that if you start with 1 pound of red worms, red worms can eat a half pound of food per day. Worms can survive up to two weeks without any additional food. The types of food worms like fruit, vegetables, newspaper and yard waste just to mention a few

Worm Training

 You can train your worms to follow the food. If you take a standard worm farm container and break it into 4 sections or Quadrants. When you feed your worms, place the food into the next section in a circular motion in the container. The worms will finish what they’re eating in one section and move with the food placement to the next section. For more information on worm training get  the Worm Farming Secrets Newsletter.


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