How The Simple Worm and Red Worm Composting Can Enact a World of Change

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by Jason

Wouldn’t it be nice to have a group of willing people to help you out with things you need to get done throughout the course of the day?  With composting at home all you have to do is put some willing and eager worms to work for you.  Less time composting, more time doing what your heart desires.  When it comes to red worm composting, you can do a lot by doing nothing.

Worker Worms that will Work for you

Red worms love to chow down on your food scraps.  Annually the united states creates an excess of waste and a great percentage of that is organic scraps that can be broken down into productive fertilizer.  In this case trash is definitely treasure.  If you have a red worm composting bin; you can magically transform trash into treasure.  Actually, the worms will do this for you.

What Will the Worms Do For You

Worms love to eat things that you don’t eat, can’t, or just plain don’t want to eat.  They do this out of their general love for all things breaking down; including that tomato you couldn’t quite finish yesterday.  The worms will eat the garbage and transform it into a highly fertile substance called castings.

Hunger and the Worm

A healthy worm will eat up to one-third of their body weight in garbage a day—and this is a conservative estimate.  They may even be able to process up to half of their body weight.  That is pretty impressive for little squirmy creatures.  If you start red worm composting try to get a general feel for how much your worms are consuming on a daily basis.

Is There Something They Won’t Eat?

Worms don’t like dense protein foods like dairy or meat.  So, in a way, they are like vegetarians.    To stifle odors, all heavy protein foods should be kept separate from your red worm composting bin.  If you would like to try Bokashi composting—a style that relies on anaerobic fermentation—it is an efficient way to deal with dense protein foods.  Using Black Soldier flys in a bin system is another way for a home-scale composter to deal with heavy protein.

Your Red Worm Compost System

When red worm composting, you need a barracks for your worms to do their work.  If you like to be more self sustainable, you can build it yourself out of a twenty gallon plastic storage bin.  If you want one that is more stylish and functional, look into ones at a local store or online.  Whichever form you choose, the worms need a place to hang out and do their garbage-breakdown-thing.

A Worm Can Change the Course of Human Events

Doing something as small as composting will help change the world for the better.  Our partners in this better world are our friendly red worm composting partners in environmentalism.  When it comes to what they do in nature, they are responsible for—amongst other things—fertilizing and adding air to the soil.  At your home, they are the small guys that do some serious good by gobbling down garbage that is envirocyclable.

An adventure is a compilation of many small steps.  You may seem like red worm composting is a small step, but it’s a huge investment in the fate of the earth.  If every home in your neighborhood composted, thousands of pounds of recyclable waste would be transformed into living topsoil.  If a whole state did it!  Imagine that!  A whole country!  The whole world!  Wow, that is some serious change occasioned by the worm!

If you liked this Red Worm Composting article, check out this Worm Factory Review.

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