From:
"Patrick Orr" <PatrickJOrr@hotmail.com>
Patrick Orr P*@Hotmail.com Zone 9
Region 15 Member: AIS, TBIS, SDIS (local)
----- Original Message -----
From:
D*@gwmail.plano.gov
To: i*@onelist.com
Sent: Thursday, January 20, 2000 11:18
AM
Subject: Re: [iris-talk] CULT:
Worms
From: "Dell Perry" <D*@gwmail.plano.gov>
Hi, Dell here. I am a vermiculturist, on a small scale,
and teach it in my Master Composting classes. Worms are great for the
garden. I encourage them in my irises, as they eat dead materials, aerate
(sp?) the soil, help till it, and amend it as they tunnel around in their
everyday work and leave behind those more precious than gold
droppings. Those egg cases are almost impossible to find. I know you have
seen worms with a 'collar' around one end. This 'collar' is where all the worm
sex occurs. When two worms meet up, they both go home pregnant. Worms are
hermaphroditic, or both sexed. The sperm is deposited at the collar,
where the eggs are. After fertilization, the collar slowly moves down the body
of the worm (as the eggs mature), and finally falls off carrying with it the
eggs. When the eggs hatch, the worms are tranlucent, usually almost colorless,
a quarter of an inch or less long, and about as thick as fine hair. They
mature rapidly and reach sexual maturity within 2 months, and the cycle
repeats. A worm bin is a very easy to build and maintain addition to your
compost operation. They will take care of all those food scraps you do not
want in your compost because they attract critters like skunks, racoons,
coyotes, armadillos, etc. Worms eat their weight in waste in about 2
days - 1 lb of worms will eat about 3 lbs of scraps a week. And if you
feed them, the worms will stay (they are dumb, but not that dumb). They
will eat everything except meats, dairy products, and citrus. They love coffee
grounds, tea bags, whatever that was in the crisper that you think used to be
lettuce; if it is rotting, they like it better, and eat the rotting stuff
first..yum-yum....so there is no smell associated with a worm bin other than a
good earthy one. A properly maintained worm bin will not harbor ants.
Ants do not like wet soil...worms do...not soaking wet, but constantly damp.
Worms breath thru their skin, so too much moisture and they drown (that's why
you see so many on the sidewalks after a rain - high ground), too little
moisture and their skin drys out and they have pulmonary paralysis -
asphyxiation (that's all the dead ones who escaped drowning and forgot to get
back in the ground when the sun came out.)
If anyone is interested, get
with me off-line, and I can get you info on how to build a worm bin in your
yard, or make a small one for your kitchen or office out of a plastic tote,
where to get the right kinds of worms, and all the necessary info to make it
work... it really is simple and easy....and kids just love it... great Cub/Boy
Scout, Brownie/Girl Scout project...or classroom project for
schools.
>>> <HIPSource@aol.com> 01/20/00 09:45AM
>>> From: HIPSource@aol.com
In a message dated 1/20/00
7:35:09 AM Eastern Standard Time, drsnooks@buffnet.net writes:
So
what do those worm egg cases you mentioned look like and where are they
found?
Anner Whitehead HIPSource@aol.com
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