Worms – Nature’s Composters
Okay all you committed recyclers out there with your compost bins and meticulously separated papers and plastics; are you ready to take the next step? Well, with very little investment you can put earthworms to work turning kitchen scraps into nature’s best fertilizer for your garden.
Vermicomposting at Home
It’s called vermicomposting and all it takes is an aerated container, some shredded newspaper, redworms (Eisenia foetida) and your garbage. Just store the container, either homemade or purchased, where it’s maintained between 40 and 80 degrees and protected from the rain — say, in a laundry room, basement or under the kitchen sink.
Popular bin brands are Can-O-Worms, Wriggly Wranch, and The Worm Factory, all available on the web. A new 3-tray bin is yours for about $65 and 1,000 worms will cost another $28. Curiously, one website I visited warns its customers not to feed them plastic, rubber or aluminum foil, just in case we mistake those for actual foodstuffs.
The Wonders of Worms in the Garden
Though earthworms were revered as early as Cleopatra’s time — she decreed them protected subjects and sacred animals — in our part of the world they were killed during the last Ice Age, leaving very little of what’s now the U.S. suitable for farming. The few worms that survived are poor soil-builders and are driven off by disturbance of any kind, so organic American farmers are indebted to European earthworms for making our soil fertile enough to feed us. All that fertility is thanks to the worms’ castings (excrement, but don’t let it bother you), which are compost of the highest grade. Not just nutrient-rich, they also aerate the soil, suppress pests and plant diseases, promote beneficial soil bacteria and correct water problems like run-off and poor drainage. No wonder studies have found up to 20 times greater yields after earthworms are introduced to farmland.
To increase the earthworm population in your garden, just give them something to eat by spreading organic matter — say, leafmold mulch — everywhere. The worms will love it and reward you by reproducing like the hedonists they are.
Worms in Forests — Not Such a Good Thing
For all their virtues, it turns out that in the wrong place — deciduous forests — earthworms do too good a job of eating the leaf litter and have caused the loss of up to 90 percent of understory plants in some areas. Though live bait has been banned in some wilderness areas, soils in my suburban neighborhood have been found to contain over 1 million earthworms per acre, so they’re here and here to stay.
Photo by Amy Stewart. Photos in collage: jade bee by the Flatbush Gardener; goldfinch by Runner Jenny.