Harvesting Worm Castings | Highly Effective Method For Separating Out The Worms!

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  • Опубликовано: 9 янв 2025

Комментарии • 453

  • @mcoates111
    @mcoates111 2 года назад +19

    I got a lot of tips from your video. One thing I've added to my process is putting a banana or a section of pumpkin at one end of the bin when I otherwise stop feeding. The worms love these foods, and in a day or so, most of the worms will be concentrated in and on these foods.

  • @VRainy-di4mz
    @VRainy-di4mz 4 года назад +16

    I have searched and searched to find out how I get my worm castings out without destroying my worms in the process. This is by far the best video ever! THANK-YOU!!!

  • @jcking6785
    @jcking6785 5 лет назад +30

    Excellent videos! Content presented in appropriate amount of time, no unnecessary footage, to the point, very informative. Voiceovers have the same great qualities, no hemming and hawing, no wasting my time. Extremely well produced in my book! Some of the best process videos I’ve ever watched. Has all the elements of a great video. KUDOS!!

  • @fertileearthwormfarm
    @fertileearthwormfarm 4 года назад +15

    What a tutorial!! Very nicely done, this should be shown to aspiring gardeners and worm farmers everywhere!

  • @andrewmicklos5690
    @andrewmicklos5690 5 лет назад +14

    You have a real talent at making these videos. You should teach people how to present their info without boring everyone to death.

  • @someblokecalleddave1
    @someblokecalleddave1 4 года назад +3

    I liked the open bottom container in the bag trick - very commendable.

  • @marjoriejohnson6535
    @marjoriejohnson6535 5 лет назад +35

    I really appreciate a video without a bunch of , blah, blah, blah. Right to the task. Thank you. Very informational.

  • @frankaredia
    @frankaredia 5 лет назад +52

    I also wonder about the egg casings. When I empty a worm bin I take great care in saving the egg casings. It takes me a long time but I feel like I am saving future worms. I empty the castings into 10 lb. plastic containers. Every day I take a little time to discover a multitude of eggs. I keep finding eggs for weeks.

    • @rhondawells7651
      @rhondawells7651 2 года назад +1

      I think (from another video I watched) it could be the size of the screen? it may have been small enough to block the cocoons along with the worms?

    • @leticiaportelinha7347
      @leticiaportelinha7347 2 года назад +4

      Hey Chauncey!! How long until all or most eggs have hatched? Thanks

    • @andrewactingwayne
      @andrewactingwayne 2 года назад +2

      @@leticiaportelinha7347
      .... about 21-ish days if I memba right.
      When I started, I basically made sure to give it about 6 weeks before I would harvest any castings so that 95+% eggs have hatched and are big enough to be up eating with the other guys.
      Now I have a few Big worm bins (8ft x 4ft & 3ft tall, each bin)
      So this may not really apply to your worm bin/casting harvesting but...
      I add approx 2 inches of food weekly to each bin. It takes the worms approx 1½ weeks for to process 2" of food.
      So about the time my bins were around 20 - 24 inches tall or filled up rather is when I started harvesting the castings via cutting 2 inches per week off the bottom.
      Anywho...
      Best of luck

    • @Guruc13
      @Guruc13 2 года назад +8

      @d New worm caretaker here, but have heard that you shouldn't feeds the worms anything with meat, dairy, salt or acid.

    • @elizabethfuhr5527
      @elizabethfuhr5527 2 года назад +1

      I admire your patience

  • @tinkeringinthailand8147
    @tinkeringinthailand8147 День назад

    Yea, great video. There's not much out there on harvesting a worm farm. You really answered a lot of questions I had. Thanks.

  • @TheChickenCoopHomestead
    @TheChickenCoopHomestead 7 лет назад +166

    I have watched tons of videos on this but this video has been the best video I've seen in this subject! Thank you!!

  • @Leisurelistsb
    @Leisurelistsb 5 лет назад +7

    Thank goodness I found your video. I got 6 worms for free last year and now have what appears to be thousands in the compost bin. Thanks to this detailed video I know what to do to get the rich soil amendment for the garden without hurting the worms.

    • @TumblinWeeds
      @TumblinWeeds 2 года назад +3

      6 worms? 😂 who was so gracious?

  • @lindap9079
    @lindap9079 2 года назад +10

    I started my first worm bin in September. Now I spend my spare time watching worm videos on RUclips. I'm amazed at the number of worms in your bin. How dense can the worm population be and not have over crowding? Is it unlimited if the worms have food? or is there a point that is unhealthy for the worms?

    • @tinameyer7080
      @tinameyer7080 Год назад +5

      The worms will "self-regulate" their reproduction rate if the bin is becoming overcrowded. I hope that helps you.

  • @ILIKEUALOT
    @ILIKEUALOT 6 лет назад +15

    This is the best video I've watched on harvesting worm castings, thanks!

  • @karenwilliams9617
    @karenwilliams9617 4 года назад +2

    Truly best ever. Your voice makes it easy listening. Thank you from Space Coast.

  • @JLJohnson
    @JLJohnson 5 лет назад +3

    Howdy. I typically reserve subscribes until I have seen at least a few videos by one account. But after this, my first view, I’m sold. Thank you for your efforts and for answering a number of my outstanding worm farm questions.

  • @martiarachman
    @martiarachman Год назад

    Thank you So much! This is Fabulous - so great to see you farm your worms and gather the castings. Such a clean and tidy operation. Love the trampoline!

  • @myhillsidegarden3998
    @myhillsidegarden3998 7 лет назад +2

    Thanks for this great tip on harvesting compost from your worm bin. You are lucky to be able to do this outside. Our winters get too cold to leave the worms in a bin outside. Today, it's 3 degrees F. Thanks for the video. Happy Gardening! Catherine

  • @gee3883
    @gee3883 5 лет назад +46

    Good tips, just one thing I would recommend is to put casters on your wooden sieve then just rock out back and forth on a bench and the castings will drop through and save your back.

    • @Diseaseisreversible
      @Diseaseisreversible 4 года назад +9

      Nah it's good for your back. Use it or lose it

    • @perfum999
      @perfum999 Год назад

      @@Diseaseisreversible I would definitely lose it if I sieved more than 8 trays. lol

  • @fergusdangerfield156
    @fergusdangerfield156 4 года назад +1

    Fantastic video my friend, I am building a greenhouse and raised bed veg garden and have been researching vermiculture and this is probably the best information I've found.im now dubbed to your chanel and am looking forward to viewing more. Big love xx.

  • @jennyrivas2280
    @jennyrivas2280 6 лет назад +2

    I am brand new to worming. Your very was very informative and helpful. I have seen so many more of what it should NOT look like. Two thumbs up!!

  • @nikmorris8624
    @nikmorris8624 3 года назад +4

    Thank you for this video ... I’ve been trying to figure out how to harvest my castings .... this was the explanation and demonstration that I needed ... brilliant

  • @LivingRedefined
    @LivingRedefined 5 лет назад +4

    I haven't harvested my worms in two years. It's going to be quite a job when I do. Will save this video for reference. Thanks!

  • @queenvaldez3502
    @queenvaldez3502 4 года назад +2

    Why didn’t I find your video after hours of researching😪 I so happy to be here lol seriously step by step plus bonus tips and video without bunch inserts. If I could give this video a million thumbs up 👍 I would thank you

  • @geneviearmecin7425
    @geneviearmecin7425 4 года назад

    Very good. Very organised and simple. Crossed the T's and dotted the I's

  • @travershart3852
    @travershart3852 3 года назад +3

    Best worm video I have watched.
    Thank you mate.

  • @Moondoggy1941
    @Moondoggy1941 2 года назад +1

    I used to have a job where I would dig out underground vaults 3' x 2' x2'. I would once in a while find one filled with worm casting, I would fill at least of those bags with the casting and worms and I would bring them home and dump them in my yard, the casting would be super fluffy and light and filled with tiny worms.

  • @LadyTSurvival
    @LadyTSurvival 2 года назад +1

    Moved a barrel yesterday and there was at least 20 worms just crawling around under it, so I gathered them up and moved them to my raised bed.

  • @playgyrl75
    @playgyrl75 3 месяца назад

    ABSOLUTELY THE BEST VIDEO EVER!! I 🎉 learned sooo much !! Thank you

  • @vidhyadev1754
    @vidhyadev1754 2 года назад

    Great Video.. Now I really understood what exactly is about worm-bins, after-use and all about it. Thank youuu

  • @kevinperry4551
    @kevinperry4551 4 года назад +1

    I have used coconut coir for a few years now and the worms seem to like it. I think it gives me a cleaner compost. I have also stopped using kitchen scraps in my worm bins, using instead dry cornmeal, oatmeal, and coffee grounds, sparingly. I also handpick all of the worms and babies and eggs every 3 months or so when I harvest the castings.

  • @6771Randy
    @6771Randy 6 лет назад +5

    I just happen to have a trampoline with a torn surface. I'm going to repurpose it for my worm bins. Thank You for the great Ideas!

  • @hirotakakokubu1268
    @hirotakakokubu1268 4 года назад +3

    Very efficient and detailed presentation! Congratulations and thank you for your effort!!

  • @charleencnossen9930
    @charleencnossen9930 2 года назад

    Finally made my worm bin. Can’t wait to get that gold! Excellent video!

  • @camgreer
    @camgreer 4 года назад +2

    That's a really great operation you've got there. I hope to get mine a bit more productive one day but I'm just using a worm factory 360 on the back deck, because the space is limited. I harvested about 5 lbs of castings today, and I get that about 3 times a year. It's enough for my small garden. But I've been moving some excess worms into a couple compost piles outside and they are really multiplying. They get lots of blended veggie scraps. Winter is on the way and I'm hoping to get them all in the big compost pile for a better chance at survival. Next year I'm hoping to have enough castings for all the neighbors that want some.

    • @rosemaryvan6885
      @rosemaryvan6885 3 года назад

      What zone are you in? Will they survive the winter?

    • @me-hp7vh
      @me-hp7vh 2 года назад

      I did a compost pile last year and beefed it up with lots of leaves, old container soil cover by the back porch when I dug into it in spring I had a good amount thriving zone 7

  • @leegodfrey3490
    @leegodfrey3490 4 года назад +4

    Great series. How do you store your bagged worm castings. How long will they stay good for. Is it OK for them to dry out and how do you keep your worms warm in the winter.. Thanks so much for your teaching

  • @jessn.2665
    @jessn.2665 Год назад +2

    Very concise video!! I’m planning on starting a worm bin, as I have a rabbit and he creates a lot of food waste and such that I’d like to dispose of in a better way. I heard hay and rabbit poop is okay to put in, but would the litter be good to put in as well since it contains pee? The litter I use is 100% recycled newspaper with no additives.

  • @TheLexy333
    @TheLexy333 4 года назад +4

    What I have seen in a video put forth by Geoff Lawton is to put fresh food on the top of a section of the container and then cover that section. Leave the other section open so light will be on the surface. A great idea would be to light the uncovered surface to expedite the worm migration. Effectively, it would be less time consuming to have a full bins worth of worms actively striving to populate the 33% of the covered fresh food area at which point you could fork off the top six inches and transfer the worms and new food to an active bin. Repeat on all bins. The remainder should be mostly worm free.

  • @BenjasUberHobby
    @BenjasUberHobby 7 лет назад +30

    Great production of warm casting :) Thanks for sharing :)

  • @deliaornelas9453
    @deliaornelas9453 4 года назад +1

    I loved your video. I've been looking and looking for the procedure of how to harvest the castings. This is very very helpful. Thank you so much.

  • @rebeccawrightdavison7508
    @rebeccawrightdavison7508 4 года назад

    Excellent and informative no time wasting chatter, thank you.

  • @reyesjnj
    @reyesjnj 2 года назад

    All you need to know on how compost is here don't need to spend hours watching other videos...I enjoyed this thank you.

  • @timothyleap9934
    @timothyleap9934 10 месяцев назад

    I never knew Seth Rogen's narration was an option for teaching me about worms, but I'm thrilled it is.

  • @japaneseslipperify
    @japaneseslipperify 2 года назад +1

    Thanks so much for this informative video! I just made my sieve and look forward to sorting my worms soon!

  • @Sarah-j-z-family
    @Sarah-j-z-family 5 лет назад +5

    Best video on home grown worm farming on RUclips. Great info! And good details shown in this video! Thanks for making this great video. I wish this video was the first one that I've watched but unfortunately there are some crappy worm farming videos out there lol.

  • @azintrepid1
    @azintrepid1 6 лет назад +14

    Thank you. How long can you store the harvested worm castings in the feed sacks?

  • @papablueshirt
    @papablueshirt 4 года назад +7

    Great video, I will use this process in my bin set up. I have about 40 bins in a wall system and some of them are reaching the end of the cycle. I was contemplating how to harvest and this method seems the least stressful on the worms. Thanks for sharing

  • @marknasatka1891
    @marknasatka1891 3 года назад

    This is exactly the kind of video I've been looking for, thank you.

  • @PaulMacklinAmazing
    @PaulMacklinAmazing 3 года назад +2

    great video thank you - I've been wondering how to process our bath worm farm which is absollutely full of casting. Well done.

  • @princessgardenswormfarm
    @princessgardenswormfarm 4 года назад +2

    Beautiful castings!! Definitely looking forward to my upcoming harvest!!

  • @thomasdoleman9593
    @thomasdoleman9593 3 года назад +1

    Awesome video buddy!
    Keep casting👍

  • @timventura
    @timventura 3 года назад

    Great video. Fully comprehensive and very thorough. Thank you!

  • @Be3eT
    @Be3eT 3 года назад

    Thank you so much for taking time shooting this video and for your other videos!! I am learning so much and am so inspired!! Thank you
    Best wishes!!

  • @bradytanguay3046
    @bradytanguay3046 4 года назад

    Great information friend! Hats off to you. Best wishes from Maine U.S.A.

  • @irmasanchez5274
    @irmasanchez5274 2 года назад

    I feel like I need to make a video for COMPLETE novices like me in order to answer questions such as;
    1. What happens if you don't regularly harvest worm castings?
    2. Why can't I use some of the soil to start a new worm bin? I'd rather not have to spend money on coir.
    3. How to ensure eggs don't get into the final result?
    4. Are the castings safe to use for N indoor container gardener? Example, I was instructed to buy certain type of potting soil to ensure the soil was sterile.
    Thank you for all the great information.

    • @tic857
      @tic857 Год назад

      1. The integrity of the castings can degrade and get mushy and pasty.
      2.use shredded paper or cardboard if you don't want to use coir for new bedding
      3.you can set the castings in a new bin for a few extra weeks and place a very light feeding on one side to attract any news hatchings and sort the new worms out.
      4. Castings are safe for houseplants I usually mix some into potting mix when I repot or sprinkle on top of of the mix.

  • @tatianainfinity8726
    @tatianainfinity8726 4 года назад +1

    Excellent explanation!

  • @myluckypenny
    @myluckypenny 7 лет назад +12

  • @mikerosner
    @mikerosner 4 года назад

    Worm castings one of natures best natural furtilizers

  • @yasmincarrillo1121
    @yasmincarrillo1121 3 года назад +1

    Wow!!!! LOVED THIS! Very inspiring:D!!

  • @mutangpadan5311
    @mutangpadan5311 2 года назад

    Great, great tutorial. Thanks man. Already at some point in the journey and am enjoying it. A subscriber.

  • @1wolfgirl300
    @1wolfgirl300 7 лет назад +15

    I know personally that my worms LOVE sun baked (then slightly dampened) or slightly composted horse manure. It's light and fluffy and they convert it to castings faster than the coco coir. Plus the horse poop is a pretty good compost base on it's own

    • @ganjagodgrower7111
      @ganjagodgrower7111 6 лет назад +1

      City to Farm so true I use horse mature all the time

  • @timcoates3821
    @timcoates3821 2 месяца назад

    My Eoros are very happy on trays much shallower than your bin. Thanks for the video

  • @mariestreeting9145
    @mariestreeting9145 4 года назад +3

    I'm in isolation with the coroniavirus and this is my job tomorrow. Thanks so much for this, VERY helpful Best wishes.

  • @normacid5144
    @normacid5144 4 года назад

    I've seen several videos and love, love, love your video! So much information Thanks

  • @mayshomesteadchronicles
    @mayshomesteadchronicles 4 года назад

    Awesome! Look at that black gold! Great tips

  • @catfunksfabulousfinds
    @catfunksfabulousfinds 2 года назад +1

    The fastest way to separate worms from castings. Add a few over ripe bananas. Cut ends off the bananas and put in one end of the worn bin. Come back later and the bananas will be packed full of red wigglers.

    • @clarejansen3548
      @clarejansen3548 Год назад

      Avocado shells too 🥑 they go mad for them

  • @ganjagodgrower7111
    @ganjagodgrower7111 6 лет назад +1

    Being creative is life 💯

  • @nodualidad.patrihernandez4008
    @nodualidad.patrihernandez4008 4 года назад

    I think this is the method I'll use. It makes 100% sense. Thank you so much for posting the video.

  • @esterg5164
    @esterg5164 3 года назад

    Fantastic video! Hi hable for sharing your knowledge!

  • @mikejones3155
    @mikejones3155 3 года назад +1

    Another awesome video..!!

  • @danahoover1216
    @danahoover1216 4 года назад

    Wow I agree. Great video no b.s. right to the point with wonderful info. Thumbs up by 10!!

  • @GetMeThere1
    @GetMeThere1 4 года назад +1

    Very nice! Thanks for posting this for us.

  • @tamishreves9891
    @tamishreves9891 2 года назад

    You are such a great teacher. I love how you explain things and you show all the details and you make it easy to follow. I love your garden wild and abundant. Where are you located? My husband and I just made a worm bin exactly how you explained, and now we have two. Our original one that was way crowded with worms and castings. So we are excited to do it the right way now! Thank you thank you for your passion and your clarity.

  • @devinjohnson1446
    @devinjohnson1446 5 лет назад +10

    Night crawlers work perfectly fine in a bin like that... you only need to add more grit then you would with red wigglers ( with reds its not really required to have grit but it helps)--- ps.. do Not mix night crawlers with reds... the reds constantly take the slime off the nights until they get too stressed and die then the reds proceed to eat the nights dead body...

    • @uchibauki2515
      @uchibauki2515 4 года назад +4

      That’s why my night crawlers are escaping because i mixed them with red worms 😓

    • @TumblinWeeds
      @TumblinWeeds 2 года назад

      Thank goodness I didn’t get both types because I didn’t have enough money

    • @perfum999
      @perfum999 Год назад

      @@uchibauki2515 I wondered why I had some worms in the liquid trough at the bottom. I bought both types originally. But, I know better now, I drained it and put the worms back in the top. Doh!

  • @sunshinesdad7990
    @sunshinesdad7990 5 лет назад +5

    Thank you, that was a cool video. I never thought I would be so fascinated by this stuff.

  • @gauchiergrows7267
    @gauchiergrows7267 4 года назад

    Wow 140 lbs!! That’s awesome, I need to get worms ASAP

  • @dennislabbe2538
    @dennislabbe2538 4 года назад +1

    I use ground organic whole flax seed that I make fresh using a coffee grinder, fresh is far superior to pre-ground.. This food contains essential fatty acids, minerals, vitamins and many other constituents that make this a super food. After I grind the flax I pour a few ounces of hot water not boiling water over the ground seed to create a mush, let it cool, dig a small trench for the feed the cover with soil from the bin or new soil when required. My first attempt , I started with 36 red wigglers from a bait shop in Canada, this was in October by the spring I had 3 large bins, I was giving worms to friends for their gardens or to raise. The quality of the feed increased the castings and the volume of worm reproduction beyond what I could have ever imagined. As a certified herbalist I try to feed my worms the highest quality of food, scraps are fine but if they come from commercially grown farms using pesticides they are very deficient in nutrients (up to 80%).
    Thank you for your video, great info.

    • @kaylabug0719
      @kaylabug0719 2 года назад

      So you feed them flax ground up? How often and how much, thank you

  • @pandapearl385
    @pandapearl385 3 года назад

    I'm going to try vermicompost this year. Thanks for the info.

  • @sandyjoao4489
    @sandyjoao4489 3 года назад

    Great video n to the point. Very informative. Wish I cud get a bath tub.

  • @KimHughesRealEstateVA
    @KimHughesRealEstateVA 5 лет назад +18

    I might have missed this, but how often do you do this? I am new to worm farming. Created my first bin in January so going into about 7 weeks now wondering how often? I'm sure it depends on how many worms and the size of the farm. I started with about 1,000 worms in a 5 pound container.

    • @mariahspencer
      @mariahspencer 2 года назад +23

      At about 0:45 he says the bin has been in service for 11 months, so maybe that means he only does this once a year? I know your comment was three years ago… and you’ve probably long moved on, but other people might need the info too! 🤪

    • @smokymountaingirl
      @smokymountaingirl Год назад

      @@mariahspencer - THANK YOU ...bc I too was wondering... that gives me a good idea of how much I need to produce for my garden beds .... again thank you!!

  • @winstonsmiths2449
    @winstonsmiths2449 3 месяца назад

    I use sifted compost, shredded brown paper and cardboard and some ground up egg shells (powder consistency) for bedding. Nothing else and it has worked for me. I use a cross-cut shredder which shreds the paper into pieces a little over 1/4". I moisten the bedding of course. I used to layer the materials but no longer. The paper mixed with the compost provides great aeration. When I add food, it is nowhere near the amounts I see on most videos. I want to keep flies and mites out of the bin. I do have food-grade diatomaceous for eliminating mites.

  • @Tipper709
    @Tipper709 7 лет назад

    I noticed near the end of the video that there was a cocoon and don't recall it being mentioned to sort them out of the sifted castings. Great video, thumbs up!

  • @madissonvargas5817
    @madissonvargas5817 4 года назад +4

    BEST UOU EXPLAINED SHOWED US AND HELPED US A LOT AHHHHH TYSM (THANK YOU SO MUCH!)

  • @jerryinawasa5281
    @jerryinawasa5281 2 года назад

    Very informative. Well done

  • @matthewho1742
    @matthewho1742 5 лет назад +2

    What do you do about the worm eggs or cacoons that are in the worm castings?

  • @myrmecofourmis
    @myrmecofourmis 3 года назад

    Great video, looks like a good technique to separate the worms, thanks !

  • @LiliansGardens
    @LiliansGardens 5 лет назад +2

    Good video. I actually don't separate my worm castings .I just place the black gold along with the worms into my garden bed. I save every worm I come across and start again every year. Any advice please. I got the worms from my garden i.e native worms ....some are red but I didn't purchase them.

  • @robertcloninger6583
    @robertcloninger6583 4 года назад +1

    Very good video thanks

  • @duallinguallady-aishaahmed1812
    @duallinguallady-aishaahmed1812 5 лет назад +2

    Oh my goodness, how do you keep your (Cultivator) tools so clean?! They are beautiful!

  • @brooklyngiraffe
    @brooklyngiraffe 4 года назад

    This was super fun to watch. Thank you!

  • @paulinejohanik7252
    @paulinejohanik7252 Год назад

    Just found this video and find this method easier than others. I'm wondering if the bags from horse or chicken feed would work for storing the castings, and for how long? Thanks.

  • @HJG-1019
    @HJG-1019 3 года назад +1

    I saved a trampoline fabric before _(though my son has come by to try to toss it out few times!)_
    *Did you cut it? Or just leave it round and fold/fit it in?*
    Can these "winter over"? What Zone are you in?

  • @supersixone9848
    @supersixone9848 4 года назад +1

    Excellent sir

  • @VanessseXY69
    @VanessseXY69 2 года назад

    wow. The perfect tutorial !!! Thank you !

  • @rlportillo
    @rlportillo 4 года назад +2

    140 POUNDS?! Wow!

  • @GameNerdMom
    @GameNerdMom 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for the info, im new to vermicomposting. And I think I just found out how im Gunn a harvest my first batch 😁😁😁

  • @rrurban
    @rrurban 4 года назад +3

    Are worm casting better for your garden than regular compost?

  • @jonathanself6985
    @jonathanself6985 10 месяцев назад

    I like this method. I'm worried my garage will get too cold in winter. Is it possible to gagther them and put them in a bucketin the winter?

  • @loriproudfoot1924
    @loriproudfoot1924 2 года назад +1

    How long do you have to wait before using the castings and what about the eggs?

  • @kcender3771
    @kcender3771 4 года назад

    Simple and good stuff. Thanks

  • @lynnegialanze8650
    @lynnegialanze8650 Год назад

    Great video and information
    Thank you 🇦🇺🪱🪱🪱