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Ready to Buy Compost Worms

Buy Worms Now

The best worms for composting are Eisenia fetida. They are known as red wiggler worm or red worms. They are the best because:

  1. They eat 25-35% of their body weight a day
  2. They can tolerate a wide range of Ph 6-8. 7 being ideal
  3. They can be kept indoor or outside

Why Buckeye Organics?

  1. We guarantee live delivery. Any issue with order, let us know within 24hrs
  2. We offer Free Shipping (USPS 2-3 day Priority Mail) on composting worms
  3. Shipping software which notifies you by email and/or text message when package shipped, out for delivery, and delivered
  4.  Excellent customer service view Customer Reviews

How many composting worms to buy?


The amount you need is determined by the amount of food scrapes your family creates and the size of your worm bin. For more information regarding this read this blog post: How Many Worms to Start a Worm Bin

Buy Worms Now

 

How to Maintain Moisture Levels in Worm Bin

It is best to water your composting worm bins in frequent light applications using a misting or spraying system instead of heavy infrequent or pouring water in your worm bin. The first 5 inches where most earthworm activity will be greatest should have the highest concentration of moisture. Under the main moisture area will be your worm castings. You don't want soggy anaerobic worm casting which smell foal but worm casting that smell earthy.

 

How Many Composting Worms Needed to Start a Worm Bin!

How Many Composting Worms Needed to Start a Worm Bin!

How many worms needed to start a worm composting bin can be answered with two questions:

-How much worm food/kitchen waste do you have access too?

-What size is your worm bin?

How Much Worm Food Do I Need

You can either estimate your weekly usage or you can weigh your food waste daily for a week and average out your daily food waste. 

Unsure as to what food waste you can feed your worms. Check out this blog post: What You Can and Cant Feed Your Composting Worms 

Compost worms eat roughly 25-35 percent of their weight per day. This is the consensus among academia research available however some places on the internet state a much higher amount up to 100% of their body weight. Using the information above, 1lb of composting worms will roughly eat 1.75 to 2.45 pounds of food per week.

 

What  Size is My Bin?

The healthy number of composting worms is 1 pounds per square feet of bin surface area (1:1). Okay, by now you are thinking about your days in high school math class, so area is simply width x length. Example: bin is 1.5ft (18 inches) by 2 feet (24 inches)  regular storage bin, your surface area is 1.5 x 2 = 3 sq ft. 3lbs of composting worms would be the most you would want to buy.

The Worm Factory and Worm Factory 360 both are recommended to start with 1 lb of Red Wigglers.  

Conclusion

So the example above of a bin 18 inches by 24 inches, the ideal number of worms is 3lbs and you would need 5.25 lbs to 7.35 lbs of food a week.

If you want to start a bin out with less that's fine, just make sure you enough food for the amount of composting worms you buy and the bin is large enough. The amazing thing about composting worms is once they reach optimal population, the worms will regulate their population. At this time you can keep one bin going, expand to a larger bin or add another bin.

Ready to Buy Compost Worms?

If you have any questions, feel free to email us. We would love to talk about getting your bin populated with the right amount of worms.

 

 

 

 

Are All Earthworms the Same?

  A common question I receive is " How many worms should I get for my raised beds" The problem with this question is that there are 3 different types of earthworms: Anecic, Endogeic, and Epigeic.

Anecic are your nightcrawlers you find in the ground. They live in the soil and have vertical burrows. They also eat soil and litter ie compost. Alabama  Jumpers are a common commercial raised anecic worm. Disclaimer: Alabama Jumpers might destroy forest due to their rapid eating.

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/invasive-earthworms-denude-forests/

  Endogeic live in the soil in horizontal burrows and just eat soil and you never see them on top of the ground and only see them when you dig in the soil.

  Epigeic live in litter ie compost with no borrows and eat compost. Most commercial raised compost worms are this type: Red Wigglers, European Night Crawlers and African Night Crawlers.

Get Your Red Wigglers

Get European Night Crawlers

  People want to put earthworms in their raised beds for aeration but the same thing can be done with the use of worm castings. Instead of putting worms into raise beds it might be best to have an indoor worm compost bin and use the castings in the beds in the spring and fall. The other benefit is that you don't have to buy worms every spring due to a lose in the winter and outside creatures eating them.

Wanting to buy Earthworms