Compost worms
Compost worms
Where do compost worms come from, anybody know ?
I'm talking about the Tiger Worms that you get in your compost bins. I've never come across Tiger Worms in the soil except when I've just spread compost and digging it in.
But .. last year I foolishly bought one of those rotary composters (foolishly as it doesn't work as easily as the make out) and today I opened it and stirred the contents, only to find Tiger Worms.
Now, this composter is off the ground by about 9", so where did the worms come from ?
Before you ask, the contents were pure grass mowings and shredded newspaper.
I'm talking about the Tiger Worms that you get in your compost bins. I've never come across Tiger Worms in the soil except when I've just spread compost and digging it in.
But .. last year I foolishly bought one of those rotary composters (foolishly as it doesn't work as easily as the make out) and today I opened it and stirred the contents, only to find Tiger Worms.
Now, this composter is off the ground by about 9", so where did the worms come from ?
Before you ask, the contents were pure grass mowings and shredded newspaper.
Tony
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
- diggernotdreamer
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Re: Compost worms
These worms, brandlings, Tiger Worms or their latin name Eisnenia Foetida don't actually live in soil, they spend their time in leaf litter, decaying vegetable matter and manure. It is possible that the eggs were in your grass lurking under some leaves or old mulch and when you put your mowings into the tumbler, you picked up the eggs with the mowings and the worms hatched out. I read somewhere a long time ago, eggs can be present on vegetables waiting for an opportune moment to hatch, if you look under flower pots, you always find some underneath
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Re: Compost worms
Well when a mommy worm and a daddy worm love each other........Odsox wrote:Where do compost worms come from, anybody know ?
Re: Compost worms
Skippy wrote:Well when a mommy worm and a daddy worm love each other........Odsox wrote:Where do compost worms come from, anybody know ?
Tony
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
- Green Aura
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Re: Compost worms
I was going to suggest eggs in your source material and then it occurred to me that I have absolutely no idea how worms reproduce!
Maggie
Never doubt that you can change history. You already have. Marge Piercy
Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. Anais Nin
Never doubt that you can change history. You already have. Marge Piercy
Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. Anais Nin
Re: Compost worms
Thanks for that DnD, that makes perfect sense if they lay there eggs on leaf litter etc.
But now I have another question, if I try to make compost with pure grass mowings instead of 50% brown added I get a slimy wet goo.
Yesterday I mowed the lawn for the first time since November and I'm ashamed to say that I didn't clean the mower last time. When I started it up it threw large chunks of brown stuff out from underneath, which turned out to be perfectly composted grass.
Any idea of the mechanism behind that ?
The only thing I can think is that no heat was involved, so it must have been aerobic. But it only took 2 cold months to totally break down the grass into a dry powdery compost.
Now if I could only manage to do that in bulk I'd be happy as a pig in whatsit.
But now I have another question, if I try to make compost with pure grass mowings instead of 50% brown added I get a slimy wet goo.
Yesterday I mowed the lawn for the first time since November and I'm ashamed to say that I didn't clean the mower last time. When I started it up it threw large chunks of brown stuff out from underneath, which turned out to be perfectly composted grass.
Any idea of the mechanism behind that ?
The only thing I can think is that no heat was involved, so it must have been aerobic. But it only took 2 cold months to totally break down the grass into a dry powdery compost.
Now if I could only manage to do that in bulk I'd be happy as a pig in whatsit.
Tony
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
- diggernotdreamer
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Re: Compost worms
I guess that the conditions were just right for the grass to dry under the mower, it didn't get wet again, there was some kind of air flow which allowed it to dry out, bit like when they find mummified body's in the loft, the right combination of slow decompostion and air flow. Inside a tumbler, there is no airflow, it starts to sweat and there is nowhere for the moisture to transpire, which is why you need the paper to take up the moisture. A few months back, I put paper on top of some beds and covered with the last of the grass mowings to keep the weeds down, it is now perfectly brown dried grass
Re: Compost worms
Mmm, well conditions were obviously just right, but I wish I knew what those conditions were.
If there's no airflow you get sludge, if you have airflow you get hay.
This was perfectly crumbly compost, unrecognisable as grass.
Mind you, if you have no airflow but with fermentation you get silage, so there's more than one way to deal with mown grass. As I get vast amounts of grass mowings from now onwards, perhaps some experimentation is in order
If there's no airflow you get sludge, if you have airflow you get hay.
This was perfectly crumbly compost, unrecognisable as grass.
Mind you, if you have no airflow but with fermentation you get silage, so there's more than one way to deal with mown grass. As I get vast amounts of grass mowings from now onwards, perhaps some experimentation is in order
Tony
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
Disclaimer: I almost certainly haven't a clue what I'm talking about.
- Weedo
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Re: Compost worms
They don't care! daddy is mommy and mommy is daddy but they really get twisted when they get together.
Odsox - the reason your grass goes to goo is simply that it is 80 -90% water with only a little mechanical tissue to hold it up, if it was then out in the rain it added to the problem. If you can get aeration (regular turning) in cool composting you will get a usable product, If you can get fermentation you will get silage but not compost (if you know a helpful farmer who makes silage try to grab a handful and use in the same way as a yeast culture) and will still need to go through the turning process with aeration. Old hay and silage bales left out in the stack for a couple of years (yes, I do store my hay in uncovered stacks in the open air) do begin to turn into a great compost fairly quickly.
Under your mower was dry but the grass was compacted, natural bacteria and fungi obviously had the right conditions.
Odsox - the reason your grass goes to goo is simply that it is 80 -90% water with only a little mechanical tissue to hold it up, if it was then out in the rain it added to the problem. If you can get aeration (regular turning) in cool composting you will get a usable product, If you can get fermentation you will get silage but not compost (if you know a helpful farmer who makes silage try to grab a handful and use in the same way as a yeast culture) and will still need to go through the turning process with aeration. Old hay and silage bales left out in the stack for a couple of years (yes, I do store my hay in uncovered stacks in the open air) do begin to turn into a great compost fairly quickly.
Under your mower was dry but the grass was compacted, natural bacteria and fungi obviously had the right conditions.
Don't let your vision cloud your sight
- diggernotdreamer
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Re: Compost worms
[quote="Odsox"]Mmm,
This was perfectly crumbly compost, unrecognisable as grass.
Oh, I understand now, maybe our friends the little compost worms had something to do with this, when my teabags go through the worms (I have a worm bin and they live on tea bags) they produce dark compost, so maybe the grass attracted some worms there and they converted it to worm casts,
This was perfectly crumbly compost, unrecognisable as grass.
Oh, I understand now, maybe our friends the little compost worms had something to do with this, when my teabags go through the worms (I have a worm bin and they live on tea bags) they produce dark compost, so maybe the grass attracted some worms there and they converted it to worm casts,
- Weedo
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Re: Compost worms
Worms on a larger scale?
I have just bought some processed worm castings; 2000kg of them. The material is worm casting, added micronutrients and added microorganisms. Some may recall my previous posts regarding the degraded state of my soils, the virtual non-existence of organic matter and lack of microbial activity (dead soil). Well, this is an attempt (experiment) to use another method to rectify the problem. I can throw tones of artifical fertiliser at the problem but if the soild are dead and compacted nothing is really achieved. I can put organic matter into the soil with green manure crops but if there is nothing to process it it does nothing.
The site is about 20 Ha, has only been used for grazing for the past 15 years and has had little fertiliser in that time except for some urea. The whole site will be ploughed and irrigated - 10 Ha will receive the worm poo at 100Kg / Ha ploughed in. the whole site, at sowing, will receive 40Kg/Ha placed under the seed - so 10 Ha will have 140Kg / Ha total and 10Ha 40kg/Ha undersown.
The whole area will be sown to Sorghum this summer and irrigated via two travelling sprinklers cover 60m wide swathes each (if I can get the @*^#* contractors off their posterior protrusions to lay the piping).
The main target is soil condition and soil activity as well as plant growth differences between the two. No differnt to you guys on your patches, just a slightly different scale.
I have just bought some processed worm castings; 2000kg of them. The material is worm casting, added micronutrients and added microorganisms. Some may recall my previous posts regarding the degraded state of my soils, the virtual non-existence of organic matter and lack of microbial activity (dead soil). Well, this is an attempt (experiment) to use another method to rectify the problem. I can throw tones of artifical fertiliser at the problem but if the soild are dead and compacted nothing is really achieved. I can put organic matter into the soil with green manure crops but if there is nothing to process it it does nothing.
The site is about 20 Ha, has only been used for grazing for the past 15 years and has had little fertiliser in that time except for some urea. The whole site will be ploughed and irrigated - 10 Ha will receive the worm poo at 100Kg / Ha ploughed in. the whole site, at sowing, will receive 40Kg/Ha placed under the seed - so 10 Ha will have 140Kg / Ha total and 10Ha 40kg/Ha undersown.
The whole area will be sown to Sorghum this summer and irrigated via two travelling sprinklers cover 60m wide swathes each (if I can get the @*^#* contractors off their posterior protrusions to lay the piping).
The main target is soil condition and soil activity as well as plant growth differences between the two. No differnt to you guys on your patches, just a slightly different scale.
Don't let your vision cloud your sight
- Flo
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Re: Compost worms
Oh my Weedo that's quite some quantity to try and get your soil up to scratch. Is the cost worth the end results is the question?
It's taken some 10 years to get the soil on number 1 allotment to a really wormful condition. Number 2 plot wouldn't know a worm if it saw one and only seems to have some slugs that attack potatoes in smaller quantities. Not even wood lice and I thought that these lived almost anywhere with wood type remains (hedge cuttings, border edges ...). After 11 months I know that it's going to be the long haul.
It's taken some 10 years to get the soil on number 1 allotment to a really wormful condition. Number 2 plot wouldn't know a worm if it saw one and only seems to have some slugs that attack potatoes in smaller quantities. Not even wood lice and I thought that these lived almost anywhere with wood type remains (hedge cuttings, border edges ...). After 11 months I know that it's going to be the long haul.
- Weedo
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Re: Compost worms
I will take what improvement I can get so will try this; I really need to get the soil condition up and improve the bioactivity. Result is to get a better use and cycling of natural and applied nutrients, better root penetration and better water holding capacity. Out of this there should also be a much improved breakdown of crop residues.
I have a 4 tonne, 28 disc plough behind a 200 Hp tractor and can't penetrate more than 50mm on this site- full cultivation depth should be 300mm.
The cost in materials works out at about $70 per Ha X twice annually plus application time - too high for my average paddock but,as this one will be irrigated, cost recovery should be OK.
My veg patch, except for the raised beds that have been "loved" is like your #2 plot - I can barely get a spade into it in summer.
I have a 4 tonne, 28 disc plough behind a 200 Hp tractor and can't penetrate more than 50mm on this site- full cultivation depth should be 300mm.
The cost in materials works out at about $70 per Ha X twice annually plus application time - too high for my average paddock but,as this one will be irrigated, cost recovery should be OK.
My veg patch, except for the raised beds that have been "loved" is like your #2 plot - I can barely get a spade into it in summer.
Don't let your vision cloud your sight
- Weedo
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Re: Compost worms
if interesed a quick follow up on this trial
1/ not much has happened - the seasons have been too dry to do much
2/ the half patch has had 100kg per hectare of worm poo - the balance none
3/ The whole has received 1 tonne Gypsum per hectare.
The problems with the soil are the result of 100 years of nutrient "mining" and excessive cultivation. The soils have little structure or microbial activity and this needs correcting before anything else. The Gypsum is to correct chemical inbalances that cause the clumping and the worm poo to introduce soil micro's, organic matter and base nutrients. So far no real rain (8 months) so nothing activated.
The pic is what the patch is like now, this is supposed to be the final fine tilth before seeding; a mix of large clods, dust and undecayed veg matter.
1/ not much has happened - the seasons have been too dry to do much
2/ the half patch has had 100kg per hectare of worm poo - the balance none
3/ The whole has received 1 tonne Gypsum per hectare.
The problems with the soil are the result of 100 years of nutrient "mining" and excessive cultivation. The soils have little structure or microbial activity and this needs correcting before anything else. The Gypsum is to correct chemical inbalances that cause the clumping and the worm poo to introduce soil micro's, organic matter and base nutrients. So far no real rain (8 months) so nothing activated.
The pic is what the patch is like now, this is supposed to be the final fine tilth before seeding; a mix of large clods, dust and undecayed veg matter.
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Don't let your vision cloud your sight
- Flo
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Re: Compost worms
Yep that looks somewhat familiar. At least we have more rain than you but at the moment - I'll join you in places on the newer plot looking like that and short of worms and other life.