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#1
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[xposted from Shed to Garden]
Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? |
#2
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![]() "Sn!pe" wrote in message . 1.4... [xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? I have both a compost bin and wormery. Generally the garden waste goes in the compost bin and the kitchen waste goes in the wormery. If you have room, why not have both? HTH Natalie |
#3
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Sn!pe wrote:
[xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? Our worms died. But perhaps we didn't look after them well enough. |
#4
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![]() "Al.Kaseltzer" wrote in message ... Sn!pe wrote: [xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? Our worms died. But perhaps we didn't look after them well enough. I reckon we had too few worms (and too small a wormery) for two people - we cook from scratch most days, and dinner involves onions and garlic which apparently they're not keen on, and we have banana skins and orange peel, and tea bags. And we should probably have put paper and the dried sea-stuff in more often. One major drawback to the wormery, of course, is that to get to the compost you have to remove the layers of food and worms. With a decent compost bin you just lift a panel and dig out a bit of compost. Apparently. |
#5
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On 26 Aug 2003 12:34:06 GMT, "Sn!pe"
wrote: [xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? You can't grow yer lunch in a compost bin, ole son. -- ®óñ© © ²°°³ |
#6
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![]() "Sn!pe" wrote in message . 1.4... [xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? I don't have either but the following (rather sheddie !) site has info..... http://www.nrwmg.vic.gov.au/wastewis...t/content.html Jenny |
#7
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Ron Clark wrote:
On 26 Aug 2003 12:34:06 GMT, "Sn!pe" wrote: [xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? You can't grow yer lunch in a compost bin, ole son. Fangyewvermush Ron... -- Sn!pe - Some kind of quantum bogodynamic singularity? |
#8
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"JennyC" wrote:
Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? I don't have either but the following (rather sheddie !) site has info..... http://www.nrwmg.vic.gov.au/wastewis...t/content.html Excellent, many thanks Jenny. -- Sn!pe - Some of quantum bogodynamic singularity? |
#9
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In article , Linz
writes I reckon we had too few worms (and too small a wormery) for two people - we cook from scratch most days, and dinner involves onions and garlic which apparently they're not keen on, and we have banana skins and orange peel, and tea bags. And we should probably have put paper and the dried sea-stuff in more often. One major drawback to the wormery, of course, is that to get to the compost you have to remove the layers of food and worms. With a decent compost bin you just lift a panel and dig out a bit of compost. Apparently. That never works. Best is to have 3 heaps, one filling , one stewing, one being used. Hi Linz - remember the barbecued carrot? -- Kay Easton Edward's earthworm page: http://www.scarboro.demon.co.uk/edward/index.htm |
#10
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"Linz" wrote in message ...
"Al.Kaseltzer" wrote in message ... Sn!pe wrote: [xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? Our worms died. But perhaps we didn't look after them well enough. I reckon we had too few worms (and too small a wormery) for two people - we cook from scratch most days, and dinner involves onions and garlic which apparently they're not keen on, and we have banana skins and orange peel, and tea bags. And we should probably have put paper and the dried sea-stuff in more often. One major drawback to the wormery, of course, is that to get to the compost you have to remove the layers of food and worms. With a decent compost bin you just lift a panel and dig out a bit of compost. Apparently. G'day, Linz! Never done it, but isn't a wormery supposed to have a coarsish mesh bottom so that the worm-worked material drops out? Apparently. Mike. |
#11
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![]() "Sn!pe" wrote in message . 1.4... [xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? be generous and have one of each? -- Chris Thomas West Cork Ireland |
#12
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Sn!pe wrote:
[xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? Killed the xpost.. Wormeries.. need less care to be successful once setup. Need more sheltered site than Compost bin.. Various designs.. Suggest the HDRA s booklet on Worm composting as a place to start.. from home made to ready made.. We have an 'original wormery' (shown on this page..) http://www.greengardener.co.uk/wormeries.htm No we didn't pay 50 quid for it.. We hauled it out of a skip where it had been discarded by its previous owners.. We find it works very well. Its sited under the shelter of a mature tree. And gets protection from frost in winter in a frost free outhouse (Actually a greenhouse or the shed..) That said there are homemade designs around for a similar construction using a black bin.. (About 8 quid retail) I would also recommend the HDRA for compost bin designs.. The 'recommended' approach involves 3 bins.. 1 current, 1 to turn into and 1 for matureing.. Given that a 1 metre heap exhausts its air every 7-10 days you have a lot of turning for the 'ideal' compost But most people get away with lots less. Cheapest bins are of wire, pole and cardboard construction.. Most expensive.. The sky's the limit!-0 www.organicgardeningcatalogue.com for those booklets.. // Jim |
#13
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Mike Lyle wibbled:
Never done it, but isn't a wormery supposed to have a coarsish mesh bottom so that the worm-worked material drops out? Apparently. This one doesn't. It has a bit in the bottom where a liquid collects that is supposedly a good feed, but the rhubarb isn't especially big, so I dunno. Maybe if the worms hadn't snuffed it it'd have jbexed better -- It's never too late to panic |
#14
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![]() "Kay Easton" wrote in message ... In article , Linz writes I reckon we had too few worms (and too small a wormery) for two people - we cook from scratch most days, and dinner involves onions and garlic which apparently they're not keen on, and we have banana skins and orange peel, and tea bags. And we should probably have put paper and the dried sea-stuff in more often. One major drawback to the wormery, of course, is that to get to the compost you have to remove the layers of food and worms. With a decent compost bin you just lift a panel and dig out a bit of compost. Apparently. That never works. Best is to have 3 heaps, one filling , one stewing, one being used. Hi Linz - remember the barbecued carrot? Barbecued carrot and compost heaps? Hmmm tasty!! -- Malc irony is like steely but with less carbon Get me out of my tree to reply |
#15
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![]() "Linz" wrote in message ... "Al.Kaseltzer" wrote in message ... Sn!pe wrote: [xposted from Shed to Garden] Hello Urglers; Can anyone offer advice regarding the pros and cons of wormeries versus compost-bins please? Our worms died. But perhaps we didn't look after them well enough. I reckon we had too few worms (and too small a wormery) for two people - we cook from scratch most days, and dinner involves onions and garlic which apparently they're not keen on, and we have banana skins and orange peel, and tea bags. And we should probably have put paper and the dried sea-stuff in more often. One major drawback to the wormery, of course, is that to get to the compost you have to remove the layers of food and worms. With a decent compost bin you just lift a panel and dig out a bit of compost. Apparently. Surely it will all work out well if your wormery was in a plastic bin with a small door at the bottom. Then, if you kept feeding from the top, there will never be much by way of worms right at the bottom, and the good stuff can simply be scooped out as needed, with minimal disturbance of the worms. Franz |
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