I have the same plastic shelves. I cut the tubes down by half. By cutting the tubes shorter this allows you to have more trays or more space. Great job.
I May steal that idea! I had the 3 bin "oscr jr" from shallow rubbermaid brute containers I kept outside. Lasted 20 years. I think this is a better system even for outside. I love my worms.
I am pretty close to making the jump and purchasing the first pound of worms, I still have a little more watching to do but Im pretyy confidant in the process thank you for all your efforts
Hi razzledazzil8948 my name is Keith and I live in Dublin if I have a worm farm and if you ever want to start on this journey I would be more than happy to help you and give you advice 🪱🪱
Thanks for the tour. I am doing something similar but a much smaller scale. I currently have two breeder bins, a nursery bin, and two new bins I just started that will likely be breeders as well while I increase my herd. Looking forward to seeing and hearing more!
@@kevinbisneau3704 Thanks for following Kevin. We just love our worms, it’s fascinating and if we can just pay for the “hobby” we’ll be happy. It’s amazing what they can do and it never gets old. Time is valuable and there doesn’t seem to be a lot of that for anyone anymore so that’s the main challenge. But it’s fun to do and I’m excited about sharing the castings with the community. Thanks again
I'm starting my own worm farm in Canada and i have to take your approach as a educator nobody knows of the benefits of worm castings or the health implications of using chemical fert people are really stuck on the NPK and not the living soil i am young so i know times change maybe we are just early adopters don't lose hope
@@JamPowe-w8c The data is there, something has changed and we now know it’s pointed to what we are consuming in our food. The taste difference in the fruits and vegetables grown in castings….if they’re making that big of difference, you know chemicals are doing the same thing and we’re consuming them with not even close to the quality. Thank you, education is key! Appreciate the comment!
AS a newbie, I am cruising U-tube and love to see other Wormeries and how they do things. Being in Central Florida I have decided to go with African Nightcrawlers. Looking forward to watching your success.
@@terrywarburton6119 from what I see, they are amazing composters! It just gets too darn cold here in Utah to raise them without spending a fortune keeping them warm in the winter. Thanks so much for the kind words and please share anything you create on your African nightcrawlers.
4:22 Worm don't eat much of the food scraps. Bacteria eats food scraps, especially food with high sugar content, like banana and melons. which is why worms are always around a ripe banana.
I actually have counted 1,000 out by hand before!
do you shred your own cardboard?
I have the same plastic shelves. I cut the tubes down by half. By cutting the tubes shorter this allows you to have more trays or more space. Great job.
@@tlnelson7598 Ahhhhhh very good to know! I didn’t even think about that! I appreciate it!
I May steal that idea! I had the 3 bin "oscr jr" from shallow rubbermaid brute containers I kept outside. Lasted 20 years. I think this is a better system even for outside. I love my worms.
@@utahwormcompany just make sure you cut the non-tapered end of the gate not the same at each end.
Hi Calvin! It's Cassie from Meme's Worm Squad. Glad to see your worm farm! Everything looks so nice, clean, and organized! 🥰 Way to go! Subscribed!
@@Soil4Soul Thanks so much for watching and the kind words. Learning lots every day, sure do enjoy it!
@@utahwormcompany you are definitely on the right track when you enjoy doing these 🥰👍
I am pretty close to making the jump and purchasing the first pound of worms, I still have a little more watching to do but Im pretyy confidant in the process thank you for all your efforts
@@zgoat4127 Do It! Just a warning though it will be coming addicting! It is really a fascinating hobby/business!
I would love to try this in northern ireland as a keen fisherman. Very best of luck
@@razzledazzle8948 just a warning you will be addicted! My advice is to dig in and do it! Best of luck and thanks for following!
Hi razzledazzil8948 my name is Keith and I live in Dublin if I have a worm farm and if you ever want to start on this journey I would be more than happy to help you and give you advice 🪱🪱
Thanks for the tour. I am doing something similar but a much smaller scale. I currently have two breeder bins, a nursery bin, and two new bins I just started that will likely be breeders as well while I increase my herd.
Looking forward to seeing and hearing more!
@@kevinbisneau3704 Thanks for following Kevin. We just love our worms, it’s fascinating and if we can just pay for the “hobby” we’ll be happy. It’s amazing what they can do and it never gets old. Time is valuable and there doesn’t seem to be a lot of that for anyone anymore so that’s the main challenge. But it’s fun to do and I’m excited about sharing the castings with the community. Thanks again
I'm starting my own worm farm in Canada and i have to take your approach as a educator nobody knows of the benefits of worm castings or the health implications of using chemical fert people are really stuck on the NPK and not the living soil i am young so i know times change maybe we are just early adopters don't lose hope
@@JamPowe-w8c The data is there, something has changed and we now know it’s pointed to what we are consuming in our food. The taste difference in the fruits and vegetables grown in castings….if they’re making that big of difference, you know chemicals are doing the same thing and we’re consuming them with not even close to the quality. Thank you, education is key! Appreciate the comment!
Made sure to come look you up so I can like, comment and subscribe 👍🏾
@@ThehandygeekGA Thanks I watch all your videos 👊🏼
Me too!
Farm looks great and love the videos
Keep up the good work
@@downtoearth139 Thank you so much for watching in the kind words!
AS a newbie, I am cruising U-tube and love to see other Wormeries and how they do things. Being in Central Florida I have decided to go with African Nightcrawlers.
Looking forward to watching your success.
@@terrywarburton6119 from what I see, they are amazing composters! It just gets too darn cold here in Utah to raise them without spending a fortune keeping them warm in the winter. Thanks so much for the kind words and please share anything you create on your African nightcrawlers.
4:22 Worm don't eat much of the food scraps. Bacteria eats food scraps, especially food with high sugar content, like banana and melons. which is why worms are always around a ripe banana.
@@victorm7274 Correct!
was wondering if you had a extra hat laying around I could purchase?? or any merch with your logo?
@@zgoat4127 Working on that now - Ill send you some free merch when it arrives!