Neighborhood Link
San Diego Clubs

National Wildlife Federation/ San Diego County
Home Page

Our Info

Contact Us

Join Us

Our Newsletter

Hit Report


Interactive Areas

Calendar

Discussion Area

Member Pages


Our PDFs

Join the San Diego Flyway Cities Coalition

Local wilderness corridors help species avoid isolation......

Easy to Find and Grow

What Pollinates Your Plants

BWHT Talking Points

Lawn Reduction

Plant Rescue

NWF Volunteer Log Sheet

Coral Reefs & Climate Change

Wildlife at Risk

Fueling the Fire, Global Warming, Fossil Fuels

Global Warming & California

Providing Water for Birds

Volunteer General Flyer

Amphibian Decline

Bird Friendly Backyard

Canopy Instructions

Owl Box Project

West Nile Garden Checklist

Western Blue Bird Survival Guide

Build a Blue Bird Box


Our Pages

Flyway Cities Coalition

Habitat Steward's Log 2008

Some Plant Lists for Habitats

What is an Inch of Water?

Anstine-Audubon Nature Preserve

Animal Rescue Information and Numbers

Creating Your Backyard Wildlife Habitat

The Basic Elements of a Wildlife Habitat

Volunteer Spirit 2006-2007

Habitat Stewards' Log 2006

Fight the Sunrise Power Scam

Compost

Campus Ecology

Ant Bait

California Native Plant Hotline

Pest Notes

Habitat Steward Community Speakers

Ponds

Ant Bait - Non Toxic

Gardening Grants 2005

Barn Owl Box References

NWF Volunteer Spirit - Published Articles

Meet The Habitat Stewards

Bird Flu

Gardening For Hummingbirds

Invasive Plants

Butterfly Basics

West Nile Virus in Your Yard

For The Birds!

Local Reptiles and Amphibians

Who speaks for the chaparral?

Ecological Zones of San Diego County

Wildlife Conflict Resolution

Worms

The San Dieguito River Project

Environmental Activism

Pest Management Recipes

All Sorts of Good Links and Resources

Are Your Trees Suffering From Root Problems?


Our Hotlinks

The Dangers of Plastic Bags

Nature Bytes Video

Center to Help Instill Respect and Preservation Garden Wildlife

The Pollinator Partnership

World of Hummingbirds

The Mulch-So Cal’s New Online Gardening Community

Barn Owl Boxes- Commercial

Changing the World One Bulb at at Time

Urban Bee Gardens

Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve

Birds and Cats - The Cats Indoors! Campaign

Agua Hedionda Lagoon Foundation

Monarch Program

Misty Birdbath

Native Plant Design and Installation

FIGHT THE SUNRISE POWERLINK SCAM

Gardens to Gro

Koi City (Pond store-Escondido, CA)

Great Ways to Shrink Your Lawn!

Sunrise Powerlink

Adopting Native Plants - video

San Diego Area Environmental Activist Events

Buena Creek Gardens

Bats of San Diego County

Theodore Payne Foundation

Butterfly Hosts

El Nativo Growers

Great Answers about Native Plants

Bat Rescue - San Diego area

Crestridge Reserve

West Nile Virus – California

Encinitas Community Wildlife Habitat Project

National Bird Feeding Society

Professional Tree Care Association of San Diego

Resources for the Trail and Classroom

San Diego 2005 Bird Festival

Cornell Lab of Ornithology

San Diego Natural History Museum Filed Guide

Southern California Chapparal Field Institute

A photographic gallery of wildflowers

California Oaks Foundation

Rancho Santa Ana Botanical Garden

Tree of Life Nursery

Project Wildlife

Friends of Los Penasquitos Canyon Preserve

Sky Hunters

California Native Plant Society San Diego Chapter

A California Native Plant Nursery

NWF Campus Ecology

NWF Volunteers & Habitate Stewards Program

NWF Schoolyard Habitat Programs

NWF Backyard Wildlife Habitat Program

Wild Bird Centers

National Wildlife Federation


Update Your Club Site

Email This Page to a Friend

Sign Up Your Club!

Find Answers
in Our FAQ




Clubs & Organizations Metro San Diego
Clubs & Organizations

National Wildlife Federation/ San Diego County
Worms


A How To Primer on Worms and Worm Farming
Earthworms are engineering marvels. Although blind, they eat anything in sight, turning trash, garbage and old love letters into priceless compost.

They can make a "bad" soil good and a "good" soil even better. They change the structure of the soil by excreting castings that bind the particles of
sand, silt and clay into aggregates, and the texture of the soil by burrowing, tunneling, and aerating the soil making even the heaviest soil more workable and the sandiest soil "plant-friendly."

Naturalists agree that fertilizing with worm castings provides the best (and perhaps the only)food most plants will ever need. Worm aficionados call it nature's organic "insecticide."

Alas, unlike space travelers, worms will not go where no worm has gone before. They will not "venture" where the land has been stripped of its topsoil, cleared by bulldozers, compressed by
construction equipment, or rendered barren and impotent by herbicides, miticides, or fungicides.

While worms might not wiggle where no worm has wiggled before, they have no choice over how and where we catch-em and feed-em and harvest their
castings. Dixieline, and other similar stores, sells sterilized worm castings under the brand name "WormGlow." It's great for fertilizing and for making "worm tea." [Editorial note: four ounces of worm castings in a cheesecloth bag, left to soak in a gallon of water for 24 hours, will become a medium strength worm tea.]

But, if you want to introduce worms "where no worm has gone before," you will need to find "live"
castings with the chance of also getting a bonus of worm eggs and larvae. You can buy "live" worm castings from Williams Worm Farm in Lakeside. You can find them on-line, or get them free from a friend with a worm bin.

Better yet, raise your own.

All you need is a pound of earthworms and a box conveniently placed in a shady spot outside your kitchen door ( or an apartment balcony) where worms can be fed kitchen waste, junk mail, letters,
shredded cardboard, crushed eggshells, etc.

Don't waste money on a commercial worm bin. Make your own. A plastic file box and a shredded Union Tribune for bedding (or a North County Times), make a good, lightweight worm bin. Buy two file boxes
with tight fitting lids; worms need a dark environment. Drill lots of air holes on all four sides as well as exit and entrance holes on top and bottom of each box.

Remove the lid from the bottom box and fit one box inside the other. After the worms consume all the food and bedding in the upper box, they will migrate down through the worm holes to find the food and bedding you provided in the lower box. Simply harvest the castings in the upper box and rotate the boxes. Hopefully, the castings will contain worm eggs and larvae that can be introduced into a shady area with damp, friable soil. A more sophisticated worm bin might contain a spigot to drain off the liquid worm tea.

"Worms love to run away from home," cautions Connie Beck Crusha, noted naturalist and environmental guru (sic). "Put the worm box up on bricks so the worms can't escape, and keep the box very moist. Worms like it more moist than you would believe."

Vermiculturist Don Kuhn relates a great story about a couple who kept their worm bin under the kitchen sink, making it easier to feed them with kitchen scraps. All went well until they returned home to discover they forgot to feed the worms before they went away. They returned to find the worms has escaped and were all over the house looking for food.

Connie Beck Crusha lines her worm boxes with fiberglass window screen fabric. The only place worms can escape to is from one box to the other.

If you need any additional information about worms, e-mail mrmort@cox.net
Mort Brigadier
Adapted from my article, Ask Any Child (About Worms), in California Garden Magazine, page181, Nov-Dec, 2004, Vol 95, No.6.-









Privacy Statement
Neighborhood Link Terms of Use
© 1997 - 2006 Neighborhood Link, Inc.