How to turn organic waste, such as kitchen scraps & vegetable peelings into rich fertilizer to not only enrich your soil but also save much space in the country landfill? Let the worms do the magic ...
All plants in your yard need soil with a proper amount of essential nutrients, vitamins, and other all-around good stuff to thrive and grow beautifully, so purchasing the wrong additives can do your ...
Harnessing the power of worms is the secret to creating the most nutritious compost imaginable. Try vermicomposting to turn ...
Use natural methods like crop rotation, mulching, and physical barriers to control harmful worms in plant soil. Your garden soil is an entire ecosystem full of non-living and living components ...
The power of non-native worms can be harnessed for good through vermicomposting: marshalling worms to eat your scraps and produce castings ...
Vermicomposting uses various species of worms, typically red wigglers, to decompose organic waste such as food scraps.
Once your bin is set up, it’s time to add some worms. Red wigglers are widely considered the best worms to use. They burrow horizontally and stay near the soil surface, only burrowing 3-8 inches deep.
One acre of worms can break up about 50 tonnes of soil. They don't eat living plant tissue, and so don't hurt plants either. They truly are a gardener's best friend! Some people even keep them as ...
This project will show children how worms turn plant waste into soil, introduce them to 'recycling' and 'useful waste', and encourage them to look closely at worms and other garden wildlife.
Grub worms are difficult to get rid of, and common mistakes gardeners make in their fight against the pests exacerbate the ...
Any experienced angler knows that the best bait is fresh bait. As good as your favorite bait, it cannot be compared to the real thing. Think about it: which you would rather have — a real juicy burger ...