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Saturday, December 4, 2010

All About Worm Castings

If you want what’s best for the Mother Nature, then you should engage in recycling. Now if you didn’t know that your regularly generated household wastes still had use, then you probably wouldn’t have started your own composting at home. Take note that your daily accumulation of food (scraps from the kitchen) and garden wastes can be turned into a valuable source of nutrients that your plants, trees, and soil can benefit a lot from. So what is this inexpensive resource? It’s actually just worm castings. Composting worms, especially from red wiggler earthworms will be able to break down all of the organic wastes (through intake), and eventually secrete this into a finished product.

Why use Worm Castings?

If you want to achieve luscious looking plants and a healthy soil, then you can definitely make good use of castings from Red Wigglers. It’s the perfect supplement for your garden, since it’s all organic. It totally gives you a better alternative especially when you compare it to chemical-based products. Other than that, it’s easy to obtain (can be done through harvesting), and is very cheap to maintain (all you’ll need is your worms, a compost bin, some bedding materials, and some organic food). With this, you’ll no longer have to run to the nearest worm farm to get your new fill of castings.

Does it smell like other types of manure?

Castings from red worms don’t smell foul. It’s actually odorless and only has an earthy smell to it. It’s something that your sense of smell can really tolerate, unlike what anaerobic composting produces.

How is Worm Castings helpful to the environment?

Apart from it being organically-made, it can be very beneficial to nature in a lot of ways. So besides having to practice recycling at home (or wherever you may be that requires gardening and fertilizing), compost from these vermicomposting worms can help improve and restructure your worn-out soil back to life. So soil that is slowly depleting of its nutrients, and then fed with worm compost will be able to bring back its moisture retention capability. Soil that has this important property will be able to supply water and nutrients to every matter that is rooted to it. Of course, the plants that are rooted to the soil will be stronger, and will be able to defend itself against potential pests and ailments.

Worm castings as a pest control product for plants?

Worm castings from Red Wiggler worms, can also be used as a pest control. It can be a better substitute for chemical fertilizers. And when you start producing worm compost on your own timeframe, then you no longer have to buy and spend money on fertilizers (you can actually save a lot of money). And since worm compost is purely organic, then you no longer have to worry about chemical leaks or any other toxic materials harming all living things (especially humans and animals).

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for sharing this information. I never knew that red wiggler can be used as pest control.

    Pest Exterminator

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  2. I have tried worm casting tea, and they make a great fertilizer. It also aids in disease/pest control.

    bed bug extermination

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