Euro Nightcrawler Worms 98-Day Time-Lapse FULL - vermicomposting

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024

Комментарии • 66

  • @A-V
    @A-V  3 года назад +3

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  • @deewormsvermicomposting
    @deewormsvermicomposting 3 года назад +11

    So peaceful and calming to watch! Thank you! The strawberries reminded me of little elf hats.

  • @I.am.Mumma.Bear.1
    @I.am.Mumma.Bear.1 Год назад +5

    Interesting to see how they avoided the cardboard and let it rot down. And also didn’t go straight for the fresh food until it began breaking down 👍🏽 great proof that microbes are an integral part of worm life and composting 🪱🦠😊
    Also the avoiding of Coco coir/peat is also a fantastic point, that worms if given a choice will avoid it, because it’s Antimicrobial.. they’re so smart 😊💕🪱👍🏽
    Thanks for showing that 😊🪱👍🏽

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад +1

      Great observations. In videos like this there are lots to see when you watch closely :)

    • @I.am.Mumma.Bear.1
      @I.am.Mumma.Bear.1 Год назад +1

      @@A-V can you do one with worm chow please 😊👍🏽
      My theory is worms don’t actually eat it but push it down and around, much like what they did to the egg shells (grit) in this video. 🤔🤓

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад

      Interesting idea... :)

  • @Derekjon35
    @Derekjon35 3 года назад +8

    Yesssssss! I can watch this again and again.

  • @KayKirkpatrick
    @KayKirkpatrick 3 года назад +20

    Seeing the eggshell bits immediately get dispersed was amazing. Definitely supports the theory that there's really no need to till your garden if you have a good worm population and the soil is not compacted.

    • @Kylie_Nobody
      @Kylie_Nobody Год назад

      Right?! No need to till the worm bin either, or to bury your food scraps in the worm bin as some would make us believe. You can just keep layering and the worms do the tilling

  • @elkejansevanrensburg4692
    @elkejansevanrensburg4692 3 года назад +4

    Thank you!!! Hypnotizingly satisfying to watch these little guys zip along. They really seem to enjoy their strawberries. And everytime the ice cubes are added, they speed up. What amazed me the most was when you added the eggshell grit ice cubes. Wow!

  • @dondig2617
    @dondig2617 Год назад +1

    Very interesting thanks for putting it on fast forward...

  • @rosinaiglesias-traductoral5827
    @rosinaiglesias-traductoral5827 3 года назад +5

    It seems cucumber is not their favourite scrap to eat. It is still there at the end of the video. Thank you for the video. It is very useful watching what they prefer to eat.

    • @LesliSagan
      @LesliSagan 2 месяца назад

      Interesting! My red wigglers can go through a large cuke in a few days. Maybe the ENCs are different.

  • @EujinLiew
    @EujinLiew 3 года назад +6

    Love your time lapse videos. Give us MORE....

  • @HildeAzul
    @HildeAzul 5 месяцев назад +1

    This is very interesting. We read that Dendrobaena Hortensis is a ‘compost’ worm, which it is, but I am hard pressed to find how this worm lives in nature and from watching this, it is my guess that this worm may be endogeic as the horizontal tunnels became more pronounced and the same worms were traveling (I slowed and paused a lot).
    Cool.

  • @franklittle
    @franklittle 3 года назад +3

    Thank you for another brilliant time lapse AV. Those ENC really don't hang about!

  • @uchibauki2515
    @uchibauki2515 3 года назад +3

    The European night crawlers are amazing I just bought some of them from fishing stores also tried to bring home the Canadian night crawlers but the cnc worms not really like eating food scraps ,they behave like the soil earthworms 🪱!

  • @soularis
    @soularis 3 года назад +3

    Love your videos. Time lapse are great fun to watch.

  • @GrimbolTheDruid
    @GrimbolTheDruid 3 года назад +2

    This was really interesting to watch! And I learned a lot about my work bins behavior! Thanks for sharing!

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад

      Thanks for watching!

  • @peterjames2580
    @peterjames2580 3 года назад +2

    Nice..... I was wondering what plastic on top would look like. Thanks again for the time lapse.

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад

      I kept thinking the same thing. I bet it would have resulted in a lot more worm traffic on the surface of the material :)

  • @rhondamontiel3827
    @rhondamontiel3827 6 месяцев назад +1

    Love the time lapses

  • @rico99586
    @rico99586 2 года назад +2

    My two biggest surprises were how slow the bananas went, and how fast the eggshell went. Opposite of what I've always thought.

  • @yousfmohd2682
    @yousfmohd2682 3 года назад +3

    Great job....very interesting.....how many worms take part in this experiment and volume of bed as well.

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад +2

      I did not count, weigh or measure the number of worms that were released into this container, but I did film the collection of the worms used for this as well as their launch. I invite you to check out that video here: ruclips.net/video/Dj_0CTOhNWI/видео.html Thank you for watching!

  • @Dee.C
    @Dee.C 3 года назад +1

    Oh wow. I watched it twice . I will have to watch again after Paige does her school work . I Know she will love it.

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад

      :)

  • @AR-tb9hq
    @AR-tb9hq 3 года назад +4

    Love these vids, we need more! Specially comparative videos, those are great

  • @franceswatts4001
    @franceswatts4001 3 года назад +3

    Awesome time lapse as usual. What was the white substance in the left corner and a smaller patch on the right? They avoided that right from the outset.

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад +3

      Great observation. That was grit (pulverized egg shell) - but what they were avoiding is the dry material that the grit was scattered into. The space right below it cavitated - is did the other side of the container. I believe it is for that reason the worms did not venture there. I made an extra effort to place extra ice cubes on those two outer sides - hoping the material would become damp enough so that the worms would not be repelled by it. Eventually they made their way over there & the grit got consumed. The mistake I made was placing dry chunks of coco coir there which absorbed a bit of moisture, got a bit swollen & then got pinned into place... preventing it from settling down with the rest of the surrounding materials. Thanks for watching!

  • @jojopornebo188
    @jojopornebo188 Год назад +1

    Can you share the observatins from these time lapse videos. IMO, you have the same amount of worms when you started until you completed. I would expect that in 90 days you would have more than quadrupled the amount of worms. Did you remove some worms? Did the worms die?

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад +1

      When worms sense that they are living in a constrained space they limit their reproduction... so perhaps that is what happened here. Or perhaps, like you said, some worms might have died - but I did not remove any. Thanks for watching!

  • @Leeu6543
    @Leeu6543 3 года назад +4

    I wonder how your house smells. Awesome video btw!

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад

      Thanks for watching!

  • @trishsmith2811
    @trishsmith2811 2 месяца назад +1

    I know this is an older video but I have a worm bin but I never put ice in it or add water. Could you explain this to me? I’m wondering if my worms are too dry. Or if this is something done just for the video. Thank you.

    • @A-V
      @A-V  2 месяца назад

      The ice is for applying moisture.. but in a way that allows it to enter the bin gradually. Thanks for watching!

  • @esmesteyn7607
    @esmesteyn7607 Год назад +1

    This is really excellent. Do you have a video how to startup something like this, step by step?

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад +1

      In the case of this particular time-lapse bin I do not have a video showing the setup... but in a few other cases I did roll the camera while building the bin. And now that you mention it, I had to go back quite a way to find an example of me showing the build of one of these time-lapse setups. More recently I have been setting up the bin & starting the filming without documenting it... and then only making a video a few days later once I was ready to recruit worms for the video & launch them into the bin. Anyhow... the following link will take you to an example of me setting up one of these time-lapses - I invite you to go check it out: ruclips.net/video/bdwnErqMUO8/видео.html Thanks for watching! PS: If you are actually looking for a video showing how you can set up a simple worm bin of your own, then I have a few examples of that too (the link here is a search of my video library for the words *"new bin"* : www.youtube.com/@A-V/search?query=new%20bin

    • @esmesteyn7607
      @esmesteyn7607 Год назад +1

      @@A-V Thank you very much for your reply. Do you know if worms can eat Eucalyptus leaves. Thank you for your great videos.

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад

      I'm sorry - I do not know. If you decide that you're going to try it then a good rule of thumb with anything new is to try it in a small portion of your worm bin - and scale up the use of experimental stuff only after it has proven to work will in isolation. Thanks again for watching!

  • @erikaircsik
    @erikaircsik 3 года назад +1

    Super cool video!

  • @janetmichel3009
    @janetmichel3009 3 года назад +1

    The frozen vs fresh banana was interesting to see; the one on the right was frozen right?

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад +2

      I know - it was interesting to see how quickly the one that had been frozen collapsed almost immediately :) Thanks for watching!

  • @Jiggler7
    @Jiggler7 Год назад +1

    Bit late to this but im curious about the little circles that move around the strawberries. Are those larvae? Or What. Great vid

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад +1

      Those are mites... helping to break down the yummy strawberries. I made a short video proving a close-up view of these types of mites. I invite you to check out that video here: ruclips.net/video/xb5oShyDyW8/видео.html Thanks for watching!

    • @Jiggler7
      @Jiggler7 Год назад +1

      @@A-V this Is amazing. Thank you.

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад

      :)

  • @carlafawcett3851
    @carlafawcett3851 3 года назад +1

    Amazing!

  • @orubanatazhelizeo2833
    @orubanatazhelizeo2833 Год назад +1

    Disculpe eso que preparo es abono para plantas
    Podría explicarme

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад

      El estiércol de lombriz no es un fertilizante típico para plantas... es más un cultivo de hongos y bacterias que proporciona al suelo del jardín muchas de las cosas que se necesitan para promover la salud de las plantas. ¡Gracias por ver!

  • @carriesweeney5421
    @carriesweeney5421 3 года назад +1

    What is the purpose of the ice?
    I've added frozen food scraps to my compost and this caused a lot of excess moisture

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад

      The ice is to make sure things do not dry out... with the materials in the container left exposed to the air without covers I worried about things losing their moisture through evaporation. Thanks for watching!

  • @michaeldavidson9939
    @michaeldavidson9939 Год назад +2

    Are these Eisenia hortensis?

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад

      I'm not very good with the scientific names of each species. I think you might be right 👍🏻

  • @borracho-joe7255
    @borracho-joe7255 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for the content but I have a question; and this is not “questioning your actions”, it is more to understand...you appear to put a lot of ice (hydration) in this bin. Is that too much moisture or are you experiencing a lot of moisture evaporation due to the lights?

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад +1

      The lights do not cause any evaporation - they are just a few dozen white Christmas lights. What I believe causes the evaporation is the uncovered container. I do not think the moisture is too much - I think it was just the right amount. Thanks for watching!

  • @FRANKIEBONESMCDOOGLE
    @FRANKIEBONESMCDOOGLE Год назад +1

    why do you add ice?

    • @A-V
      @A-V  Год назад +2

      The ice is for applying moisture.. but in a way that allows it to enter the bin gradually. Thanks for watching!

  • @alanciu2353
    @alanciu2353 2 года назад +1

    Why add ice ?

    • @A-V
      @A-V  2 года назад +1

      The ice is for applying moisture.. but in a way that allows it to enter the bin gradually. Thanks for watching!

    • @alanciu2353
      @alanciu2353 2 года назад +1

      @@A-V
      Tqvm

  • @AteamOFturds
    @AteamOFturds 3 года назад +1

    I believe it’s visible half way through that you can see mites eating as well . Am I correct?

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад

      Yes, I think you are. Thanks for watching!

  • @muhk9100
    @muhk9100 3 года назад +1

    @ A V Do you by chance have any Enchytraeus albidus (White worms) or Enchytraeus buchholzi (Grindal worms)? although they are tiny it'd be very interesting to see how quick(or slow) they work compared to their big siblings. Im not sure if the process is the same for them or not but have always wondered what they could do in large numbers. Anyways great vid!

    • @A-V
      @A-V  3 года назад +2

      I have red wigglers, blue worms, European & African nightcrawlers... but none of the types you mentioned. Thanks for watching!