Grit for Worms: Eggshells, Biochar, and Bone Meal

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  • Опубликовано: 29 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 68

  • @hopehope938
    @hopehope938 Год назад +1

    I am very impressed with your worm RUclips Videos very professional. I am still learning and with the high temperatures of 2023 I have started two different worm bins with two different genetic sources for my Red Wigglers and one genetic source for my earth worms. So far I am impressed with how fast the earth worms grow I started working with the weekend the hurricane hit Southern California. Because of the high summer temps of 2023 I was not able to purchase the worms from the company I had originally planed on so I had to get creative and resourceful and so far my worm farm project is slowly moving forward!

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      Awesome!!! I kept red wrigglers in Southern California for years. Happy to assist you if you have any questions! I used to put ice packs in the bins twice a day when we had heat waves. That helped a lot!

  • @NanasWorms
    @NanasWorms Год назад +3

    Beautiful video! We make bone broth out of organically raised poultry. We then strain the bones from the finished bone broth and bake them in the oven. After that, I grind a few bones with my food scraps and freeze it prior to feeding to my worms. It's an incredible bonemeal with no odours whatsoever.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      What a great system!! One of my concerns with bone is the quality of life animals receive in commercial farming. I really like how you are closing the loop!! Question, why bone broth? Is there a particular benefit? I make lots of veggie broth but have not tried bone.

    • @NanasWorms
      @NanasWorms Год назад +3

      @@GardensofNewEngland Bone broth is an incredible source of easily digestible protein in the form of amino acids, so it's good for your gut. These amino acids are essential to build connective tissue in the body, so bone broth can help if you have joint or bone issues or connective tissue problems.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад +1

      @@NanasWorms Thank you!! This is great information!!!

    • @carpentryfirst3048
      @carpentryfirst3048 Год назад +3

      ​@@GardensofNewEngland I always thought bone broth was the base broth for many common soups like chicken noodle :)

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      @@carpentryfirst3048 it is!!

  • @radoslawmaziakowski1398
    @radoslawmaziakowski1398 Год назад +3

    You're doing great job. Content full of knowledge.

  • @868Nako
    @868Nako 24 дня назад +1

    As for the sand, what you need is a sharp sand, it doesn't clump and allows water to flow so you won't run into that issue.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  24 дня назад +1

      That is a good point! I do not have issues with it clumping, pretty much stays suspended in the vermicompost. The potential risk is it accumulating in the bottom of the bin if folk add too much. Thanks for sharing the tips!

  • @JAN-gu2nw
    @JAN-gu2nw Год назад +2

    Do u use red wiggles?
    Do u have a video on starting & harvesting a bin?
    Love your professional & informative videos.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      Awww! Thank you!!!
      I have one on how I harvest. I do not use a sifter.
      ruclips.net/video/wVfrEK_qY24/видео.html
      Here is good playlist on the basics:
      ruclips.net/p/PLJQ7A3Z50v5H67itC8VmY6YnQ-X9jpg7R

  • @ckmbyrnes
    @ckmbyrnes 11 месяцев назад

    I use sand as my main source of grit. I separate it out of my native soil through a wet screening process so it is clean by the time the worms get it. I have never had any of the problems you said people have with sand. If one harvests regularly it does not give the sand time to compact. I used to use ground charcoal but stopped after I learned it is VERY alkaline. I might try again but in smaller amounts.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  11 месяцев назад

      I use sand too but in combination with biochar and eggshells. Biochar or charcoal is pretty ph neutral. Ash is what you really don’t want to use because it’s very alkaline.

    • @ckmbyrnes
      @ckmbyrnes 11 месяцев назад

      @@GardensofNewEngland I once commented on another worm channel that I was using charcoal to regulate moisture and he cautioned me against it because of the high pH. But further research does show the charcoal is relatively neutral. Thanks.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  11 месяцев назад

      @@ckmbyrnes oh so glad we got that sorted out!! Charcoal is one of the best additions to your bin, but you do have to make sure it is clean from ash. You can even wash if you are making it yourself.

  • @azurosir
    @azurosir Месяц назад +1

    maybe it's unrelated, maybe not: but did you try adding vermiculite and/or perlite?

  • @pisoiorfan
    @pisoiorfan Год назад +1

    Perlite is like sand without the disadvantage - it drains and aerates well.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      oh interesting! I never thought about perlite as an option. Thanks for sharing!

  • @iowaviking
    @iowaviking Год назад +1

    Great information

  • @meeteetsecd5253
    @meeteetsecd5253 3 месяца назад +1

    Has anyone tried using mealworm frass as grit?

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  3 месяца назад

      Worth trying!! I have used crab shells before but discontinued because it still had a bit of a seafood smell. Animals will break into your system if they smell something they would want to eat. So, if your system is outside, be careful.

  • @pellekrantz4484
    @pellekrantz4484 Год назад +1

    How du u do the big harvest?

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      I use lateral flow or migration method. It works relatively well and it is non intrusive.
      ruclips.net/video/wVfrEK_qY24/видео.html

  • @lizprocopiou9944
    @lizprocopiou9944 9 месяцев назад

    Hi from Cyprus, just stumbled on your videos EXCELLENT INFO 😊 im new to worm farming, please tell me your recomended oven temperature for cooking eggshells. Thanks

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  9 месяцев назад

      Hi there, thanks for saying hello! 200 degrees for 10-15 min would do it. I usually just dry mine for several months before use. The key is to eliminate moisture.

    • @lizprocopiou9944
      @lizprocopiou9944 9 месяцев назад

      @@GardensofNewEngland ok thanks again. 🤗

    • @marjoriejohnson6535
      @marjoriejohnson6535 8 месяцев назад +1

      I use micro wave..1 minute intervals about 2 times a day for couple days...haven't had problems in the 30 + years I have had a wormery.

  • @Gonzalo_M
    @Gonzalo_M Год назад +1

    Thanks for all the information! :D
    Do you still use bokashi compost prior to feed your worms?
    And, do you add all those ingredients in the bokashi or give them directly to the worms?

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад +1

      Jorge, I recently found a new source of food--a juice bar is making their pulp available to me. It gets digested in a matter of days. I still do bokashi but I am adding that to my regular composting pile. I might move and no longer have access to the pulp, in which case I will go back to bokashi. Yes, these materials, all three, I add to the food scraps weather it be bokashi or pulp.

    • @Gonzalo_M
      @Gonzalo_M Год назад +1

      @@GardensofNewEngland Sounds great! And what is your recommendation from your experience. To give food scraps directly to worms with those three ingredients from your video. Or to put the food scraps + 3 ingredients in bokashi and once the bokashi is ready, to give it to worms. What is best from your experience? thanks by the way! :)

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад +1

      Jorge, it really depends on your preference. I started to do bokashi because I was doing indoors composting in the middle of winter in Massachusetts. So, I needed something to make the process easier, less excess fluids, less issues with bugs, and potential smells. Bokashi helps eliminate lots of fluids before the food gets to the worms, and it kills fly eggs. No more fruit flies or black soldier flies after I started doing bokashi. I would add the grit materials when I am going to add either the bokashi or the fresh food scraps to the bin. I would not add that to the bokashi because it is going to soak lots of acid from the fermentation. You want to add it after the stuff is fermented to neutralize the acidity. If you have an outdoors system, you could try to do a regular composting pile and then feed that to the worms--but make sure invasive worms do not get into it. In sum, I would do bokashi if I was doing indoors composting. Once the food is fermented, I would add the grit as I add it to the bin--make sure you are adding it to a section of the bin and not all of it because it is VERY acidic. You want the worms to come to it and not to be forced to live in it. You can kill them if you make them live in fresh bokashi. So, give them lots of areas without food for them to be. They will move in on their own. I hope that helps! Ask anything else if you have further questions.

    • @Gonzalo_M
      @Gonzalo_M Год назад +1

      @@GardensofNewEngland Incredible! I appreciate so much all your insights. It's SO helpful! :)

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      Jorge, you are most welcome!!

  • @apple-horti-786
    @apple-horti-786 Год назад +1

    Nice information👍

  • @feeldafury
    @feeldafury Год назад

    Is it okay to use powder oyster shell?

  • @tg8051
    @tg8051 Год назад +3

    Fish Bone Meal is the preferred source of phosphorus and also has calcium with a small amount of nitrogen & also preferred because it doesn't come from animals treated with antibiotics, hormones etc.
    I get my fish bone meal from buildasoil website

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      I was reading about that. How is the smell? Are there any concerns about mercury content? I have an indoor system so I wonder if it would smell too much. I will check it out for my orchard.

    • @t3dwards13
      @t3dwards13 Год назад +2

      I just bury the fish heads under my trees.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      @@t3dwards13 Thank you! I have been thinking about doing something similar. There is a great fish market close to where I live. I have hesitated because I have bears around and I know fish has a strong smell.

  • @randallwithee2189
    @randallwithee2189 Год назад +1

    What about:
    1. Greensand
    2. Azomite
    3. Crushed Oyster/Clam Shells
    4. Crushed Lobster/Crab Shells

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      Thank you!!!! I am going to look into some of these. I have been thinking about greensand.

    • @ckmbyrnes
      @ckmbyrnes 11 месяцев назад

      These are probably good sources of grit, but for the most part harder to get in quantities sufficient to use in a worm farm. The items he outlined are readily available and can be made/collected at home without buying anything.

  • @denislukasov4813
    @denislukasov4813 Год назад

    Hello everyone. It's not related to particular this topic BUT it's related to wormery and food waste. I know that fresh food scraps green waste BUT what if I dry it enough till it's turn brown. Would it make a brown CO2 reach material? It's just my theory so please correct me if I'm wrong. The reason for this theory is that I have way too much green material BUT very little brown. Thanks

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      Interesting question! I am not an expert on the chemistry of composting. But, as we dry food, nitrogen content decreases and some of it is transformed. If you dry vegetables to their bare bones, you get a carbon structure. Carbon is the foundation of most living tissue, including our own bodies. At that point, the food scraps become more carbon. However, you want quality carbon material to help your bin with key functions like air flow and structure. Dry food scraps wont likely do the same job as dry leaves. You have a couple of options, you can ferment the excess food scraps via bokashi fermentation or you can bury them if you do not have a regular compost pile. Bokashi fermentation has a lot of positive attributes and it enriches the soil. I feed bokashi to my worms, but you can just bury it directly into your garden beds. Where do you live? Cardboard, leaves, and even saw dust can help you with the brown/carbon ratio.

    • @denislukasov4813
      @denislukasov4813 Год назад +1

      @@GardensofNewEngland Thanks for getting back to me. This is exactly what my thoughts are - dry food is a carbon rich structure. I will have a look at bokashi composting. In the meantime, I bury excess scraps in the front of the garden.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      Denise, you are most welcome! Bokashi is a great way to enrich the food scraps before you bury them into the soil. I use two basic homedepot buckets. You do not have to buy a bokashi bucket. There is a myriad of benefits associated with bokashi so definitively check that out. I have video where I explain how to use it in my worm bin, but you just need to ferment and add to you garden since you are trying to reduce kitchen waste.
      Here is my diy bokashi bucket: ruclips.net/video/TOgkSO7GA8U/видео.html

    • @denislukasov4813
      @denislukasov4813 Год назад +1

      @@GardensofNewEngland Thanks 🙏

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад

      @@denislukasov4813 you are most welcome!

  • @DennisZimmerman
    @DennisZimmerman 10 месяцев назад

    I use quail egg shells

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  10 месяцев назад

      Awesome!!!! have you noticed any difference? probably a cleaner source of calcium than commercial eggs.

  • @t3dwards13
    @t3dwards13 Год назад +1

    I throw my bone scraps in the fire when I'm making biochar.

  • @617grower7
    @617grower7 Год назад +1

    Just started a vermihut

  • @ronevergrow8319
    @ronevergrow8319 Год назад +1

    Don't be fooled by marketing, titles and names.
    Purina worm Chow is nothing but dog food with higher percentage of cornmeal, grains, alfalfa meal, chalk/ calcium carbonate and maybe a few other things🤷‍♂️, but they are very similar dog food has added greens mealed into a powder ( they are very much interchangeable ).
    You can take dog food mix it with Cornmeal Wheat molasses or brown sugar and oatmeal blend into powder/ a meal and you could have damn near a lifetime supply of worm chow if you buy a big bag of dried dog food🤷‍♂️...
    Search the ingredients on both,
    Dont listen to the bull
    Do your homework ( its the same ingredients maybe a little off but nothing that will hurt the worms, only stuff good for them in reality🤷‍♂️) .
    PS higher-quality the dog food the higher-quality to chow.🖖

  • @GardensofNewEngland
    @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад +1

    How to Maximize Worm Population: ruclips.net/video/rZKG1V75iVI/видео.html

  • @razer356
    @razer356 Год назад +4

    Dirt, not sand, I'm 73 years old, and I've never found a live worm in a sandbed. Sorry but that's just me.

    • @GardensofNewEngland
      @GardensofNewEngland  Год назад +2

      Worms need moisture and lots or organic material. You would not find them in sand alone. But, most soils have a certain level of sand particles which worms use as grit in the wild.

    • @randallwithee2189
      @randallwithee2189 Год назад +1

      I think we are talking about a minute amount of sand, like the crushed eggshells. We aren't talking about raising worms in a bin full of eggshells or sand. Just like chickens, you don't feed them sand, butvyou do have to provide some sand/Grit so they can "chew" their food in their gizzards... just like worms.