Our
new worm farm is located inside a glazed ceramic pot.
It looks
like a feature garden pot. This method could be used indoors.
How It differs from conventional home worm-farm systems:
- It
requires less monitoring once established because it is closed system
where the products (castings and liquid manure) are used directly by
the plants above.
- Directly feeds the plants with the worm castings
- The solid, earthy smelling enclosure deters pests such as mice, cockroaches, ants or possums.
- Scraps that the poultry don't eat (citrus, banana peel, spicy curries) can be fed to the worms.
- Scraps can be fed down the shoot and compressed and covered by the lid. Watering can be done through the lid.
- The waste fertilised water can be piped through the base drain and bottled downhill.
- After a year we opened up the contents, scooping it out onto a ground sheet and found loads of worms to share with others, we then used the beautiful castings as soil at the top for new plantings.

How the Worm Farm Pot works:
- A layer of filtering carbon-rich material such as paper, straw and sticks is put in the base.
- The worms and food are placed above this material and
during the set up stage they are closely monitored, not over fed and
kept adequately moist (you can guage moisture level by the presence of
flies and bugs, if these are present there is not enough moisture.
If there is too much moisture the worms will drown, leave the
system or it will start to smell bad. The worms were covered
always with a layer of dry carbon-rich material such as cardboard,
straw and hesian when available.
- Over a period of a couple of months (this will depend on
your climate and season) the worms multiplied and the bedding material
increased in volume.
- The feeding pipe was introduced, it is approx 700mm long
and reaches the layer of worms so they can be fed through this pipe
later. The pipe is made from recycled plastic agricultural
piping, the holes in the side were made bigger by puncturing with a
large screw driver.
- A small pot is used as a lid. It also serves well to compress the food once it has been put down the pipe.
- The final stage involved putting a layer of soil on top. The soil is not above the level of the pipe.
- Plants, seed and mulch were then added. We like to use hair as mulch on precious plants.
Permaculture Analysis of Worms
Needs: |
Intrinsic Characteristics: |
Functions: |
- Cool Temperature 5-20 degrees C.
- Moist, aerated bedding
- Partly composted food. Can die from overfeeding
- Housing (box or hole) with light below
- predators such as birds. Protection from co-hosts such as rats, ants, flies.
- Bedding/food pH requires monitoring.
- Regular food and water as with any animal.
- Protection from elements and extremes in temperature fluctuation.
- Worms need to be collected and relocated when housing becomes too cramped.
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Variations in size colour and hardiness
for each of the 2 main types:
Earthworm or Compost worm.
Earthworm requires soil housing,
compost worms will die without a regular supply of decaying matter.
You cannot use soil worms for a composting worm bin. |
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