Worm Tower Experiment

ekim046

Well-Known Member
Hello everyone, I just wanted to share the results of my worm tower experiment.
In my opinion, worm tower use in your soil is one of the best things you can do to improve soil fertility!
Our garden is completely organic and most of it is in very large containers.
Of all of our containers, the 40 gallon container with the worm tower yielded far more than the other containers.

Why use a worm tower you ask?
First off, it is probably the lowest maintenance vermicomposter you can find.
Yes, we do have a separate vermicomposter but the worm tower is unique in the sense that you never have to harvest compost from it.

The worm tower is heavily inoculated with mycorrhizae that happily supplies the plant's roots from far below the topsoil. So every so often, I will throw a tablespoon of kelp, blood meal, bone meal, mushroom compost, guano, A.A.C.T, table scraps, soft rock phosphate, honestly WHATEVER! With that, I give it a thorough watering which also feeds the deep tap roots as well.

The attached photo is a little bit dated as the container looks vastly different now. I will be sure to upload an updated picture soon ;)

Got questions? Ask away! I am happy to brainstorm whatever you got ;)
 

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greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
Hello everyone, I just wanted to share the results of my worm tower experiment.
In my opinion, worm tower use in your soil is one of the best things you can do to improve soil fertility!
Our garden is completely organic and most of it is in very large containers.
Of all of our containers, the 40 gallon container with the worm tower yielded far more than the other containers.

Why use a worm tower you ask?
First off, it is probably the lowest maintenance vermicomposter you can find.
Yes, we do have a separate vermicomposter but the worm tower is unique in the sense that you never have to harvest compost from it.

The worm tower is heavily inoculated with mycorrhizae that happily supplies the plant's roots from far below the topsoil. So every so often, I will throw a tablespoon of kelp, blood meal, bone meal, mushroom compost, guano, A.A.C.T, table scraps, soft rock phosphate, honestly WHATEVER! With that, I give it a thorough watering which also feeds the deep tap roots as well.

The attached photo is a little bit dated as the container looks vastly different now. I will be sure to upload an updated picture soon ;)

Got questions? Ask away! I am happy to brainstorm whatever you got ;)
its a good idea, i'm not sure if the tower would have many advantages that a normal soil container with worms though.
I mean, I guess it is sorta like a topdress too, I always throw a big handful of my homemade EWC with my container, worms, cocoons, vermicompost and all.
Worms are a VERY important part of any organic grow, good job.
 

keysareme

Well-Known Member
Hello everyone, I just wanted to share the results of my worm tower experiment.
In my opinion, worm tower use in your soil is one of the best things you can do to improve soil fertility!
Our garden is completely organic and most of it is in very large containers.
Of all of our containers, the 40 gallon container with the worm tower yielded far more than the other containers.

Why use a worm tower you ask?
First off, it is probably the lowest maintenance vermicomposter you can find.
Yes, we do have a separate vermicomposter but the worm tower is unique in the sense that you never have to harvest compost from it.

The worm tower is heavily inoculated with mycorrhizae that happily supplies the plant's roots from far below the topsoil. So every so often, I will throw a tablespoon of kelp, blood meal, bone meal, mushroom compost, guano, A.A.C.T, table scraps, soft rock phosphate, honestly WHATEVER! With that, I give it a thorough watering which also feeds the deep tap roots as well.

The attached photo is a little bit dated as the container looks vastly different now. I will be sure to upload an updated picture soon ;)

Got questions? Ask away! I am happy to brainstorm whatever you got ;)
Awesome!
 

ekim046

Well-Known Member
its a good idea, i'm not sure if the tower would have many advantages that a normal soil container with worms though.
I mean, I guess it is sorta like a topdress too, I always throw a big handful of my homemade EWC with my container, worms, cocoons, vermicompost and all.
Worms are a VERY important part of any organic grow, good job.
It really is beneficial, you can take my word!
I'll have updated pictures of the worm tower soon and all the lovely plants it is taking care of
 

foreverflyhi

Well-Known Member
Hello everyone, I just wanted to share the results of my worm tower experiment.
In my opinion, worm tower use in your soil is one of the best things you can do to improve soil fertility!
Our garden is completely organic and most of it is in very large containers.
Of all of our containers, the 40 gallon container with the worm tower yielded far more than the other containers.

Why use a worm tower you ask?
First off, it is probably the lowest maintenance vermicomposter you can find.
Yes, we do have a separate vermicomposter but the worm tower is unique in the sense that you never have to harvest compost from it.

The worm tower is heavily inoculated with mycorrhizae that happily supplies the plant's roots from far below the topsoil. So every so often, I will throw a tablespoon of kelp, blood meal, bone meal, mushroom compost, guano, A.A.C.T, table scraps, soft rock phosphate, honestly WHATEVER! With that, I give it a thorough watering which also feeds the deep tap roots as well.

The attached photo is a little bit dated as the container looks vastly different now. I will be sure to upload an updated picture soon ;)

Got questions? Ask away! I am happy to brainstorm whatever you got ;)
Just pointing out that there is NO mychorizzal in the worm tower. That's has to be added during transplant for the mycho to infect the roots.

Btw cool on the worm tower, I see these all the time on craigslist
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
It really is beneficial, you can take my word!
I'll have updated pictures of the worm tower soon and all the lovely plants it is taking care of
i'm sure it is, like I said, you are topdressing with a bunch of stuff, plants love small topdressings. I have NO doubt that a worm tower is beneficial to the plants, it's just not practical for some
 

ekim046

Well-Known Member
But keep in mind that the nmycorrhizal colony is always digesting food and making nutrients plant available very, very quickly. If I could show you just how quickly food goes in and turns into compost I would! I fill it halfway full every so often, this means that it is emptying by the time i refill!
 

ekim046

Well-Known Member
Just pointing out that there is NO mychorizzal in the worm tower. That's has to be added during transplant for the mycho to infect the roots.

Btw cool on the worm tower, I see these all the time on craigslist
Yup, the bed was fortified with Mycorrhizal inoculant from Paul Stamets' www.fungi.com
 

ekim046

Well-Known Member
Hmm, I'm happy you brought that up. I always thought that the roots would grow into a colony because the bed is heavily fortified. Does it have to be inoculated during transplant or can the roots reach out to them as they grow? Thanks for the correction :)
 

hyroot

Well-Known Member
personally I use cover crops to produce mychorrizzae in the soil. Clover, barley , etc... why pay a hefty price for a powder that's most likely doesn't have myco's .... Ie they need roots to survive..


question on the tower. Do the worms really leave the tower after feeding. An move about the pot or bed and excrete their castings through out the soil? Or do they just congregate in the tower where the food is? In my bin worms stay where the food is. Until its gone. Then they look for food.
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
Hmm, I'm happy you brought that up. I always thought that the roots would grow into a colony because the bed is heavily fortified. Does it have to be inoculated during transplant or can the roots reach out to them as they grow? Thanks for the correction :)
from what I understand the myco dies (or is eaten by other microbes) if it's not applied to the roots, so maybe not, however i'd add if your soil is a good organic one i'm not sure it would make a huge difference.
 

st0wandgrow

Well-Known Member
This is a really interesting concept. I like the idea of having a worm tower in each bucket and not really have to harvest castings per se. How small can these towers be though? I use 7 gallon buckets and I'm having a hard time visualising how I could fit one of these towers in the bucket along side each plant??
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
This is a really interesting concept. I like the idea of having a worm tower in each bucket and not really have to harvest castings per se. How small can these towers be though? I use 7 gallon buckets and I'm having a hard time visualising how I could fit one of these towers in the bucket along side each plant??
you know... I bet you could get a smallish (maybe 3" in diameter, and you may be able to squeeze that in there, only issue would be maybe light blockage? maybe not if it is short...
I always throw my homemade castings in my pots when I topdress and I never screen them, thinking worms and cocoons are good for the container.
but a worm tower would be cool, and it would be easier to do my compost... I don't know. Couldn't hurt to experiment. Now, if only I didn't have like three other experiments going at the same time...
 

st0wandgrow

Well-Known Member
you know... I bet you could get a smallish (maybe 3" in diameter, and you may be able to squeeze that in there, only issue would be maybe light blockage? maybe not if it is short...
I always throw my homemade castings in my pots when I topdress and I never screen them, thinking worms and cocoons are good for the container.
but a worm tower would be cool, and it would be easier to do my compost... I don't know. Couldn't hurt to experiment. Now, if only I didn't have like three other experiments going at the same time...
I might try it on a plant or two. This would be a no-brainer if I were rocking a nice big raised bed or something.
 

greasemonkeymann

Well-Known Member
I might try it on a plant or two. This would be a no-brainer if I were rocking a nice big raised bed or something.
oh hell yeah, I always wish I could just fill my room with about two feet of mixed soil. But I have too many damn strains, and it seems like none of them like to grow together, all finishing totally differently.
Course I like my sativas.. and those can be some unruly bitches
 
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