Nancy Reading wrote:Hi Chris and a belated welcome to Permies!
I had a similar set up here - not in design, but in size probably ( my design thread here). I thought it hadn't worked at all, but when I emptied it after a few months the worms had been multiplying fine, but obviously couldn't cope with the amount of food I was giving them. Also the result was rather anaerobic due (I think) to a lack of drier carbon rich material.
I'm going to try again but
1) Not expect it to cope with all my kitchen scraps and
2) add some clean sawdust/wood shavings to aid in aeration.
Good luck with your pet worms!
Keith Odell wrote:Chris,
Your design will work - eventually. 20 worms will take a while to make a difference. In that time you will need to make sure you don't overfeed and create an Ammonia cloud - not dead worms, they just disappear.
Also, are you sure they were red worms and not earth worms or nightcrawlers. Red worms will reward you eventually, earth worms or night crawlers, not so much.
If we assume that you are feeding ok and they were red worms, the main issue is space. It takes 2 to tango and the dance floor is huge for 20 worms. They'll get there, it will just take longer.
I will start a small bin - 1/2 gallon with 20 worms so they can get to know each other. Then when they have multiplied sufficiently, I'll start a bigger bin with them.
The other thing to watch out for is heat. If your black worm bin is in the sun much at all it will cook your worms.
Good luck.