Dear farmerfischer,I do a largish worm bin.. it's made from a 250-300 gallon spa whirl pool tub.. ( outdoors) I use it to recycle my old soil mixes and house hold veggie waste.. i also use a small bin made from five gallon buckets for in house use during the winter.. View attachment 4116229
Once this blizzard passes I'll post up pics of the spa tub worm bin.. i read some where that one pound of red worms can produce 10-20 pounds of worm dirt in 30 days.. this will be my first full year using my worm bins.. the worm dirt in the spa tub I'll be using in holes for my cannabis and raised veggie/flower beds..
Keep it up, good brother.What up dude! I run a small compost and soil business here is what I can tell you. The hardest part is operating on a large scale.
First you need the space to store not only the worms and everything they encompass, but you also need a space to store excess waste because in order to maintain the volume of waste you need to operate a large scale castings operation. In order to obtain the amount of waste you need you need to hook up with some commercial level waste generating businesses (restaurants, coffee shops, etc), your worms will not be able to process the amount of waste you'll bring in on a weekly basis unfortunately. But you need to take the waste from said businesses on a regular basis or you will create a burden for them and they won't want to participate. So you need to either store the waste while it rots...or have space to do traditional composting, before you transfer to the worm bins. This seems to be the most successful route from what I've seen and done.
This is not getting into the logistics of labor. You're definitely gonna need a small tractor with some kind of front loading capability. Along with a small truck for waste pick ups, plus gas and all that good stuff for the truck.
And just like with growing, you put all this money and labor into it, and then you still gotta wait a few months before you actually have a product to sell...so you either need cash to sustain you or a second job in the meantime.
The good news is once you have it is pretty easy to get rid of. Don't expect to get people to pay grow store bagged prices...but I just advertise through Craigslist and word of mouth and I always sell out by the end of gardening season because my operation isn't big enough to make enough compost to sell year round.
My back hurts all the time but all this has just got me further into farming other crops and getting passionate about other agriculture projects. I just cleared an acre and a half to plant a small vineyard. Even if you're not composting and worm farming on a large scale I recommend anyone with a passion for gardening get into it doing it on a small scale. You'll save yourself some money on trash bags and you'll be doing your part to lighten the burden we put on our already overflowing landfills.Keep it up, good brother.
yup, totally feel you here. I love to grow things, and in fact that was my inspiration for going organic in the first place... then i realized i should be doing it with cannabis too! Well... here we are now . Cheers RoyMy back hurts all the time but all this has just got me further into farming other crops and getting passionate about other agriculture projects. I just cleared an acre and a half to plant a small vineyard. Even if you're not composting and worm farming on a large scale I recommend anyone with a passion for gardening get into it doing it on a small scale. You'll save yourself some money on trash bags and you'll be doing your part to lighten the burden we put on our already overflowing landfills.
Cheers man!yup, totally feel you here. I love to grow things, and in fact that was my inspiration for going organic in the first place... then i realized i should be doing it with cannabis too! Well... here we are now . Cheers Roy
Dear EpicFlowers,I've seen videos of guys that run commercial worm farms out of 5 gallon buckets filled with cow shit. They keep them in stacks 4 high on pallets. It looks quite doable as a side project.
Dear chiqifella,heat were manageable indoors for me, but the labor was not eventually.
I used a utv with a dump bucket, a wheelbarrow, shovel and mostly my back.
Dear Rasta Roy,The good news is once you have it is pretty easy to get rid of. Don't expect to get people to pay grow store bagged prices...but I just advertise through Craigslist and word of mouth and I always sell out by the end of gardening season because my operation isn't big enough to make enough compost to sell year round.
Dear TheEpicFlowers,
Dear chiqifella,
I currently run more or less a 6 gallon bin indoors. And I could not agree more! Indoor it is hell.
Having said this, outdoors it can only be much more simple, cleaner and easier to manage. I will have much more space and freedom of movement at my disposal and this is what I am currently lacking.
FreedomOfMovingly yours,
M
M
Dear chiquifela,for sure outdoor would be easier, unfortunately worm bins dont flourish in my winter outdoors.
If temperature was my only concern I'd probably still be worming. You've presented some good info thank you.Dear chiquifela,
Should you want to go back to your endeavor, there are so many passive insulation technics using empty plastic bottle filled with air, black tarp, safety blanket, hot compost etc.. that I am sure should one would want it one would manage to keep the wrigglers at least alive in winter.
Warmly yours,
M
One of my favorites is to Daisy chain radiators together under an active compost pile and pump water through them in a sealed recirculating system. The guy who I saw do this used it for hot water for his house and never ran out.Dear chiquifela,
Should you want to go back to your endeavor, there are so many passive insulation technics using empty plastic bottle filled with air, black tarp, safety blanket, hot compost etc.. that I am sure should one would want it one would manage to keep the wrigglers at least alive in winter.
Warmly yours,
M
Okay, so first my apologies, it's been a long day. And I've been hitting my wax pen and drinking a couple jolly pumpkin aged ales so forgive me if I'm a little loose with details. Also a couple things are trade secrets man I can't just put all the good stuff online for freeDear Rasta Roy,
Thank you so much for your encouraging and inspiring reply. I will have about 3 acres of land with a 650 sqf building with the possibility to add an additional building (maybe greenhouse). There is a pond and probably the possibility to find underground water (streams all over the area).
My goal is to initially setup an organic orchard and probably a vegetable garden as I do have a job that I like. Should I manage to generate enough income from my worm farm (probably biochar production as well) I might go part time and eventually full time on my future farm. I will not have the capacity to invest much money at first but I eventually will. I am fairly certain some of the neighbors have front loaders or other sorts of necessary equipment.
Could you give me some details on your operation? size amount of work you pout in it etc?
Questionningly yours,
M