Just think, most of our favorite foods marinade and blossom in worm dung, or turds, or scat, or poop. It just rolls off the tongue better when you say worm💩!
this helped me visually realize just how difficult it is to break down paper and cardboard, despite them being biodegradable. we don't appreciate decomposers enough for their work
Yes! I’ve also found that species affects behavior. Canadian night crawlers (fishing worms lol) act like puppies! They love attention and will wave to you sometimes like “hello my favorite human is here!” (They will be okay if you don’t talk to them like I did but they seem to prefer it) I’m hoping to get some more soon as unfortunately my last two batches died due to temperature. The first set was accidental greenhouse, the second was “it’s too expensive to run the air conditioner even though it’s 96 degrees outside and you literally told me your worms would die” on my parents’ end.
Excellent info here! I think I'm going to use more leaf material in my bins! Info I've read online is totally false they said it takes longer for leaf material than cardboard... you are the worm myth buster!
@@rajinfootonchuriquen Es verdad que por los enlaces beta 1-4 del polisacárido es complicado obtener los monómeros de glucosa pero no tiene nada que ver la "digestibilidad" con la solubilidad de la celulosa.
I believe it is healthy to mix. Adding a bit of everything. Then turn it over. But, if your goal is to compost. You don't want bins in the first place. You want net cages or similar that can bring in a lot of oxygen to the soil. You want the bacteria to work more than the worms. Because bacteria process the material far faster and more effectively.
@@Helveteshit I'm not new to composting or worm vermicomposting . I think you're missing the point of this video he made. It's to study worm behavior in different types of material. My worms break down material way faster than any compost pile will. In this video he isn't feeding any vegetables and the bins don't have a full population of worms yet. Once they breed an army they can take down a huge amount of material in very little time
Well, this I do know and try my best not to think about it. Each "like" AND "dislike" on video recommendations, forms a pattern that is unique to each of us. Then the algorithm analyzes that pattern and we get a worm video that we both watched from beginning to end.
Earthworms are so cool. I used to play with them lots as a kid when it rained. The great thing about this you got free compost and free worms for fishing, the remains with which you get more compost and thus more worms.
It's amazing the difference in color of the castings. The paper bin looks like sawdust and the cardboard is tan color while the leaves are much darker castings
Even as a gardener, I thought, who would watch over 4 minutes of time lapse composting with worms. Then proceeded to watch over 4 mins of time lapse composting with worms with great interest. 🙂
Woah lots of criticism! 😂 I started composting at the beginning of this year and I really enjoyed watching the comparison of leaves breaking down compared to the cardboard. I’m actually looking forward to autumn now so I collect all that carbon! Leaves will have so much more nutrients than card for my veggies next year. Thank you to whoever made this video!
@@pedrof3364I have a Darlek bin and add fruit and veg scraps, garden scraps, autumn leaves, paper and cardboard. It’s all a learning process and varies depending on your climate. Most beginners don’t add enough ‘browns’, so that’s the leaves, paper and card. I’ve learned a ton from a group called Keep Calm and Make Compost in Facebook
Very interesting at how they were able to convert the waste into nutrient rich composted soil, and the constant adding of water eith a stable release method, "in ice". Very efficient little creatures.
The worms in the far left section definitely grew bigger faster. Even though cardboard and paper are biodegradable, it does not look yummy on the worms’ diet. 😅
i can tell you, i have a worm box in my kitchen. there once was a dead worm in it, and little white mites ate it up. the worms, i think, did not mind, but the white mites all over it 😋 #feedthephobia bit hey, they do a great job!
In the beginning there were like 10 worms per unit. In the end there were like 10 thousand worms per unit What did you learn today? -worms be thirsty if they be mass producing every 3 days😂
Teaching my 5th graders about decomposers and told them I'd give them extra credit if they wrote "REMEMBER THE WORM!" next to the definition on their test, amazingly they're all excited to take the test now just for that.😂 Worms are great!!
This is great! Proves that worms prefer natural material over processed. My 8' x 4' bin was started with very aged horse manure and leaves from the yard. I feed once a week. I can't wait for the weather to warm and the population to explode. Keep posting the videos! These really help me unwind from a hard day. Thanks for making these. Can't wait to see your next time-lapse!
Not at all. You wouldn't last on only french fries ;) Worms don't like single food source as well. Leaves and grass clippings give off both carbohydrates and aminoacids. Cardboard and paper don't have much of those. There's sulfur and nitrogen deficiency. So... mixing cardboard and paper with food scraps is brilliant and red wigglers would love that. Giving them only paper isn't particularly good idea.
When i was younger i loved to play with worms and i used to pull out worms from the soul in a gentle way one by one and then i used to let them go inside the soul again. For the for time for like 20 years now i am interested again on worms because of this video
I have other similar time-lapse videos too. If you have interest in checking some of them out, then I invite you to see the playlist where I put them all together. Here is the link: th-cam.com/play/PLMXQWDlzK6p82BlI_uK0xs2locpu7L7xp.html Thanks for watching!
Very telling video. The more organic bin on the left had faster process time, made more babies, had better results and it seemed were happier worms. The bin in the middle was so indigestible with colored cardboard until the worms were forced to eat it or starve, and the bin on the right almost made me sick the results looked so disgusting. This will definitely change what I feed my compost/worm bin. All that extra cardboard is getting pitched.
I want to see another one, this time with different types of food, say one chamber has healthy stuff and the other has Twinkie’s or MacDonalds hamburgers or something
Worms don't eat processed food and are strictly vegetarian. Look up black soldier flies larvae or mealworms, these guys are monsters at decomposing junk food.
I don't if you added ice purposefully, but it helps in two ways. 1. It adds necessary moisture to Worms to breakdown food/organic waste. 2. Heat releases while worms decomposing food. Heat may stack up reaches 50°C or more eventually kills worms at bottom.
yamum isgae Alright. There’s a thing called ‘Siri’ on Apple mobiles. It’s like Alexa. So, I asked ‘Siri’ the lifespan of earthworms and it came up with 1100 days or 36 months. This person thought the soil would just be shits and corpses when in reality only a year had went by, therefore it is unlikely that many earthworms died as they usually can live longer. Edit: you probably don’t use Apple, do you? Which may explain why you were so confused
I've had to relocate it all to a different location and so I have been living off the harvest. It's amazing how the worms and living soil organisms turned 18 tons of trash into soil and only took about 3 months for each batch. Working on a project to take it around UK 🇬🇧 and many thanks for your inspirational video and all the awesome you tube good people on our mother earth. Thank you for teaching us how to help heal the soil. The soil is like the skin of the earth. Please keep posting your inspirational and helpful videos.
I'm about to redesign and scale up my worm composting set-up, this was surprisingly helpful! It was interesting how much adding the grit near the end of the timelapse speeded up the breakdown for the middle section, which was lagging. I can definitely add crushed eggshells (we have 50 hens). I'm definitely going to have a clear perspex side so I can see what's happening underneath.
This video jogged my memory that in first grade my teacher had a worm dude visit us with his big compost bin full of worms and paper. We got to see how the worms ate the waste and made fresh soil. It was neat.
I made a compost bin a few months ago, just for an experiment, and so far, so good. Food scraps have broken down bit by bit, and thanks to the soil I have, I don’t have to worry about watering it. And believe it or not, today, before I put some more dirt and food scraps in it, I stirred it so it can get some air, and I found a worm! I’m so happy, that now my compost bin can break down a bit faster than usual. Hopefully it tells its friends!😂
@@A-V Yeah, exactly that! And also, I just discovered something new at work. In Walmart, in the Sporting goods, we now have live, and fresh worms. I think it said something like they’re Wrangler Worms or something. They’re for fishing. Are those good to put in my compost bin? Or no?
I am fairly sure that the worms they sell at Walmart for bait are worms that could be used for vermicomposting. In most cases the packaging specifies which type of worms they are selling you.... 👍🏻
Fascinating and informative. Next time I harvest the castings I’m going to change what I I put in their tub. I have three tubs so I stagger doing the swap out. I’m sure the worms will want to to say thank you. My year round garden will benefit as well. 😊 thanks.
Love your time lapse vids! I wonder, can you make 3 chamber time lapse with 1 chamber enc, 1 chamber red wrigglers and a 3rd chamber with no worms. I’m curious to see how natural decomposition goes without the worms.
I've been thinking of getting the three chamber container set up for another time-lapse soon. Your suggestion is a good one - I was thinking of a similar setup too. Thanks for watching!
Pretty cool. What would happen if the worms could travel back and forth between the containers. Perhaps cutoff the bottom bit of the dividers Is be interested in seeing if the worms had a preference of material
@Daniel Scotton Wikipedia page in my native language says the opposite so I think I believe that more than your opinion. And how on earth speeding up the decompose can be harmful in any way? The faster sth gets recycled, the better for the environment. Also, introducing air into the soil has actually very beneficial means for the rooting systems and other fungi (they get more nitrogen and thus grows faster). P.s. Plants don't need organic matter to grow...
My friend in primary school used to go out at lunch time when it rained and save worms from the concrete. They called her worm girl. I respect worm girl.
They, fungus, bacteria, and microbes are key for our soils! To my knowledge, soil was originally created by fungi that lived on rock. For a long time only fungi thrived on land, until the fungi had created soil and then plants came in.
I am glad you enjoyed it. I invite you to browse around my channel - there are other similar time-lapse videos there. Hopefully you'll find others you enjoy. Thanks for watching!
After watching this I have one question: Didn't the ink and colour harm the worms in some way? I didn't look like it did, but it could be a long-term thing.
Paper itself has a ton of chemicals (which is why a paper cut really hurts) so if the worms with paper didn’t die, then the dye components should have no effect
So what I'm seeing is my hippy ex girlfriend was right when she said "You can compost anything" I mean minus the obvious shit but like, you just turned cardboard into rich soil little wormies. Good job. Really proud of you
That moment when you realize that every delicious piece of fruit, every stalk of grain, every vegetable you've ever eaten, once had a part of it's existence covered in worm feces. Keep on working fellas. We need our decomposers! LOL
cev5656 that’s exactly what happens at landfills. Once a landfill is considered “full” it’s left alone to allow the worms to turn the area into soil. Unfortunately a lot of landfills are flooded with toxic dump that kill worms which is why they never stop being landfills.
Worms are probably the most under appreciated animal out there, they help break down materials while simultaneously rotating the topsoil.
Bees - "Am I a Joke to you??"
@@frankv2314 Bees are sooo 2010, it’s all about worms now
(Said in valley girl voice)*
Ecosystem
cockroaches
Imagine being appreciated for just living your life the way you were made to
I'd never thought of it before but, 'healthy' soil is, effectively, lots and lots of worm sh*t.
Elijahblue88 or shrooms
Just think, most of our favorite foods marinade and blossom in worm dung, or turds, or scat, or poop. It just rolls off the tongue better when you say worm💩!
Didn't evolve period. Especially over billions of years.
L M 🤦♂️
Lol. Ok.
Worms: " it ain't much but it's honest work"
100+ likes but no replies.. so i should make 1.. :-)
yep
Hahaha lol
Imagine all those disposable face masks that are not being decomposed...
loled irl
this helped me visually realize just how difficult it is to break down paper and cardboard, despite them being biodegradable. we don't appreciate decomposers enough for their work
Hot composting is way faster but requires nitrogen rich material as well
Well i mean
Really the decomposers are just eating extra tough food
Its kind of a reward in and of itself
Yes agreed.
"where did all my stuff go???"
worm: *gone, reduced to atoms*
is this from a movie?
@@gc0009 the bottom quote is from Avengers Endgame
this quote was all i could think about the whole time lmao
Gone, reduced to poo
@@ItsEdboyand pee tea
This really illustrates how decomposition is not a passive but very much an active process.
I'll call you later today it's free bones for everyone to come on
TH-cam: expanding your interests one weird ass recommendation at a time.
The hero we never knew we needed!
Amber Hess im loving the new algorithm
2 days ago I got a song about shaving balls,
Yesterday I got a story about someone stuck in time on an airplane,
And today, worms!
it really was worth the watch
dansgotworms@gmail.com
if you grow veggies this tip is pretty good !
These worms did more good for the world in 100 days than I did in 1 year
More like your whole life
@@mgarratt101 well you've do have a point there... I really don't remember ever doing anything good for the world
@@insectslayer1374 I picked up some litter today, so that's a start I guess
@@mgarratt101 good atleast you're starting to change your ways
start small then just be consistent. A raindrop is small but together many form oceans so dont think your small good deed will not be helpful.
Just imagine how jealous the worms in the middle bin were looking through the glass to the left.
The grass is always greener.. especially when it is to the left. :) Thanks for watching!
If it makes you feel better worms don't have eyes
@@A-V I see you.. This comment got you a subscriber XD
:)
lol😂
This is both disgusting and interesting
*Intriguing*
*Disgustresting
😂
Intrigusting 😀
Magic spaghetti
Lmao. It's what intriguing means 4troml
I must consume what the algorithm provides.
We are all just worms digesting millions of hours of content being fed to us.
There’s a pink Floyd reference in there somewhere
No wonder this world is so shitty
Bow down to our digital overlords
R/im14andthisisdeep
When the truth is ridiculous and we all know it! Very astute observation!
Now THIS is the quality entertainment I was looking for.
I like the little boost in activity Everytime he added ice
Nick Loven oh was that ice lol hahaha I was like wtf is that sugar??? Ok cool that’s a good idea
jashyboo 🤦♂️
@@jashyboo sugar rush 😁
I read rice 🍚 😂😂😂😂😂
@@fittpatley same here ! lol
If worms could sing, I imagine they'd sound like that.
They would sound like worms in spongebob
Kinda wholesome thought lol
😂
This is cute.
The music itself sounds like its saying “yeah worm bin”
Earthworms used to gross me out so much lol and I'm a gardener. Now I feel so bad when I injure them removing the top layer of grass to make new beds.
Cut them in half and you've got two worms.
Earth worms die i reckon if you cut them in half. Only some don't
Look into no - dig garden beds and the worms can remain to help you maximise the yields.
Ive killed so many worms setting up my garden but sometimes you gotta do it 😭
We are going to be eaten like this sooner or later
Damn dude, you alright?
Hell yeah brother, let the worms dance
@@StillARandomGuy
Yes,I just imagine my absolute future
4th chamber video being completed now...
@@StillARandomGuy he means when you die
i'm very happy i was able to see this in my life time.
I'm glad you enjoyed it. Please check my channel for other similar time-lapse videos. Thank for watching!
@@A-V Are you going to use the compost for anything?
The worm did great job for the world..
Right, because the next time it happens you won't see it, you will be the material
Worms: "Just when we get close to living a minimalistic lifestyle some clown throws in more junk"
Basicly "When earth starts to settle, god throws a stone at it." 😂
That's why we need Alaskan worms. So we can recycle car
What about an Alaskan Bull Worm?
Faster to recycle things, literally everything. I wonder how to tame the worm
Shafiq Hizam lmaoooo if no one gets this, idk what to say😂
I do this in my office in Southeast Alaska, makes food waste disappear :)
I did your those to recycle some scraps in trash can and later I found no trash can and the worms started breaking down my home.
It's so cool that you can actually see them lay eggs in the second half!! Love it. I've had a worm bin before, worms are the freaking best
Where?
Yes! I’ve also found that species affects behavior. Canadian night crawlers (fishing worms lol) act like puppies! They love attention and will wave to you sometimes like “hello my favorite human is here!” (They will be okay if you don’t talk to them like I did but they seem to prefer it)
I’m hoping to get some more soon as unfortunately my last two batches died due to temperature. The first set was accidental greenhouse, the second was “it’s too expensive to run the air conditioner even though it’s 96 degrees outside and you literally told me your worms would die” on my parents’ end.
@@StarlightEdith you sound like a woman
Would love to have seen a fourth compartment with greens like food scraps and fresh mowed grass for comparation
Excellent info here! I think I'm going to use more leaf material in my bins! Info I've read online is totally false they said it takes longer for leaf material than cardboard... you are the worm myth buster!
Pero las hojas tienen más nitrógeno que el papel. Es por eso que composta más rápido.
@@Korsan977 es porque las hojas son más digeribles. El papel es pura celulosa, o sea, pura fibra insoluble.
@@rajinfootonchuriquen Es verdad que por los enlaces beta 1-4 del polisacárido es complicado obtener los monómeros de glucosa pero no tiene nada que ver la "digestibilidad" con la solubilidad de la celulosa.
I believe it is healthy to mix. Adding a bit of everything. Then turn it over. But, if your goal is to compost. You don't want bins in the first place. You want net cages or similar that can bring in a lot of oxygen to the soil. You want the bacteria to work more than the worms. Because bacteria process the material far faster and more effectively.
@@Helveteshit I'm not new to composting or worm vermicomposting . I think you're missing the point of this video he made. It's to study worm behavior in different types of material. My worms break down material way faster than any compost pile will. In this video he isn't feeding any vegetables and the bins don't have a full population of worms yet. Once they breed an army they can take down a huge amount of material in very little time
Why am I interested in this
Why do youtube know I interested in this while I dont know I do
They know you better than yourself 😉
TH-cam: expanding your interests one weird ass recommendation at a time.
The hero we never knew we needed!
That's the purpose of reccomendations🙂
It's the algorithm moving views to smaller channels so Google can pay bigger channels less money.
Well, this I do know and try my best not to think about it. Each "like" AND "dislike" on video recommendations, forms a pattern that is unique to each of us. Then the algorithm analyzes that pattern and we get a worm video that we both watched from beginning to end.
Earthworms are so cool. I used to play with them lots as a kid when it rained. The great thing about this you got free compost and free worms for fishing, the remains with which you get more compost and thus more worms.
It's amazing the difference in color of the castings. The paper bin looks like sawdust and the cardboard is tan color while the leaves are much darker castings
they really do like their whiskey on the rocks don't they
Even as a gardener, I thought, who would watch over 4 minutes of time lapse composting with worms. Then proceeded to watch over 4 mins of time lapse composting with worms with great interest. 🙂
Funny you mentioned gardener. I got here from looking up how to grow romaine lettuce lmao.
no one: ...
youtube recommendation: here have some worms
Ikr
Just why ?
Yes
icrei evryteim haha Im saying
And their shit
Woah lots of criticism! 😂 I started composting at the beginning of this year and I really enjoyed watching the comparison of leaves breaking down compared to the cardboard. I’m actually looking forward to autumn now so I collect all that carbon! Leaves will have so much more nutrients than card for my veggies next year. Thank you to whoever made this video!
how can i start? i dont know what to put inside ...
@@pedrof3364I have a Darlek bin and add fruit and veg scraps, garden scraps, autumn leaves, paper and cardboard. It’s all a learning process and varies depending on your climate. Most beginners don’t add enough ‘browns’, so that’s the leaves, paper and card. I’ve learned a ton from a group called Keep Calm and Make Compost in Facebook
Very interesting at how they were able to convert the waste into nutrient rich composted soil, and the constant adding of water eith a stable release method, "in ice". Very efficient little creatures.
😮❗None else is impresed how fast can this worms turn paper and cardboards into compost?? 🐛🐛🐛❣️
Nah, kek.
@@Documentoh paper and cardboards usually take over one year to disolve in nature
Probably because that's all they have in the chamber.
yeah. about 100 days
they are eating cardboards???, they can eat that ??.
The worms in the far left section definitely grew bigger faster. Even though cardboard and paper are biodegradable, it does not look yummy on the worms’ diet. 😅
Cellulose cant be digested easily, specially from industrial products
Which is why we should make a super worm that can!
it's basically pure carbs. you don't get too far with that.
@@zaddyxyborg9873 you jest, but the person who creates such a thing will be rich
@@zaddyxyborg9873 this is how you get the movie "Tremors" type worms.
These kinds of videos might genuinely be the best way to educate people about littering and pollution
Wow they literally make soil... Though I don't like em my respect for them just grew
Where did you think all the dead leaves went every spring?
@@assordante2205 I thought the water melting broke them down into the soil
@@PikaPunch44 did you go to school? At all??? This is grade school knowledge.
@@LittleLillypad I'm glad u assume that everybody's grade school is correct and true cause mine certainly wasn't
@@LittleLillypad just cause you know something at your school doesn't mean we all learn it. Chillax dude... Let people learn for themselves
Why ice?
To keep the worms cool under pressure. They had a camera watching their every move for 100 days after all!
Time-release application of moisture. Thanks for watching!
@@geyotepilkington2892 10/10
All living things need water.
To keep moisture
To think you'll end up as their food as well...
*New Phobia Unlocked*
i would rather worms have my body than anything humans could/would do after i’m no longer occupying it
I’ve read that our bodies are decomposed not by worms but by Fungus, bacteria and microbes
@@SriramNarayanan78 and worms.
i can tell you, i have a worm box in my kitchen. there once was a dead worm in it, and little white mites ate it up. the worms, i think, did not mind, but the white mites all over it 😋 #feedthephobia
bit hey, they do a great job!
The worms crawl in ...
Never thought WORMS could be FUN to watch. THANKS!
this is what a all u can eat buffet looks like to a mole.
@@mr.m.r8840 😅
@@mr.m.r8840 6.022 actually
*Avogadro disagrees vehemently*
@@anasazhari4498 I just had Avogadro on toast. So trendy 😬
@@amberhess6717 How does avocado actually taste like tho? Never had one yet.
With all that ice , I’m guessing those worms have the best margarita parties deep in the center of those bins !
Just thinking about our bodies once we’re buried in the grown and seeing these worms what they can do give me chills
i know its beautiful! returning to the soil from wich we came..,,,
Dust we are, and to the dust we go.
Except most of us that are buried will be in a concrete casket liner... so the only worms that get to eat us are the worms we bring with us.
@@____________838 just human soup in a concrete bowl
or cremation
In the beginning there were like 10 worms per unit.
In the end there were like 10 thousand worms per unit
What did you learn today?
-worms be thirsty if they be mass producing every 3 days😂
@ it's an English thing area like thing.
In the beginning there was 10 worms
In the beginning there were like 10 worms
@ Sometimes, in English slang, the word "like" is used to mean "about", "approximately", "as many as", "nearly equivalent to", or other such synonyms.
@ like means like, bitch
@@jango7889 😂
@@tuffaluffagus even I know that and English isn't even my first language. It's not that hard.
Even worms can win battles when they re fighting against dirt.
I think they are the ones who create dirt.
Teaching my 5th graders about decomposers and told them I'd give them extra credit if they wrote "REMEMBER THE WORM!" next to the definition on their test, amazingly they're all excited to take the test now just for that.😂 Worms are great!!
Nice! Please more of that!
I got my worms today and start a worm bin too!
Decomposition and decay is my FAVORITE subject. Simply fascinating!
WOW!! It's cool to know that those worms are working hard and we don't notice! Thank you for sharing!
This is great! Proves that worms prefer natural material over processed. My 8' x 4' bin was started with very aged horse manure and leaves from the yard. I feed once a week. I can't wait for the weather to warm and the population to explode. Keep posting the videos! These really help me unwind from a hard day. Thanks for making these. Can't wait to see your next time-lapse!
Not at all. You wouldn't last on only french fries ;) Worms don't like single food source as well. Leaves and grass clippings give off both carbohydrates and aminoacids. Cardboard and paper don't have much of those. There's sulfur and nitrogen deficiency. So... mixing cardboard and paper with food scraps is brilliant and red wigglers would love that. Giving them only paper isn't particularly good idea.
my composter is one week old now. this video inspired me to build one for my kitchen waste
That's great - thank you for watching!
Strangely, this was very therapeutic to watch. #NATURE
When i was younger i loved to play with worms and i used to pull out worms from the soul in a gentle way one by one and then i used to let them go inside the soul again. For the for time for like 20 years now i am interested again on worms because of this video
I'm going to assume "soul" is a typo there...
Well, this is the second time I'm watching this in less than a year. It's cool.
I have other similar time-lapse videos too. If you have interest in checking some of them out, then I invite you to see the playlist where I put them all together. Here is the link: th-cam.com/play/PLMXQWDlzK6p82BlI_uK0xs2locpu7L7xp.html Thanks for watching!
Why not consider a “ green” burial. Basically you just turn unto soil with no chemicals etc. Google it!🤓😷🇨🇦
Now THIS was the best example of the WHY, in composting.
The chickens in the backyard will be very happy to see those worms
Very telling video. The more organic bin on the left had faster process time, made more babies, had better results and it seemed were happier worms. The bin in the middle was so indigestible with colored cardboard until the worms were forced to eat it or starve, and the bin on the right almost made me sick the results looked so disgusting. This will definitely change what I feed my compost/worm bin. All that extra cardboard is getting pitched.
Thank you for watching!
Really enjoy your time lapses! Thanks for creating and sharing. 👍
Thanks for watching!
I want to see another one, this time with different types of food, say one chamber has healthy stuff and the other has Twinkie’s or MacDonalds hamburgers or something
Worms don't eat processed food and are strictly vegetarian. Look up black soldier flies larvae or mealworms, these guys are monsters at decomposing junk food.
Feeding worms with Twinkies and McDonalds food must be considered animal cruelty!
@@sishrac Why lmao
@@captainjackpugh6050 Because it's food-like substances that humans eat and not actually food.
This helped me understand them better. Thank you for taking the time.
I don't if you added ice purposefully, but it helps in two ways.
1. It adds necessary moisture to Worms to breakdown food/organic waste.
2. Heat releases while worms decomposing food. Heat may stack up reaches 50°C or more eventually kills worms at bottom.
If I learned anything, it’s that soil is just worm shit and corpses
Well, according to Siri. Earthworms have a lifespan of 1100 days, so I think there wouldn’t be any corpses down there.
@@uhhuh1291 what?
yamum isgae
So...
What confused you?
@@uhhuh1291
Your comment dosent make sense.
More context please
yamum isgae
Alright. There’s a thing called ‘Siri’ on Apple mobiles. It’s like Alexa. So, I asked ‘Siri’ the lifespan of earthworms and it came up with 1100 days or 36 months. This person thought the soil would just be shits and corpses when in reality only a year had went by, therefore it is unlikely that many earthworms died as they usually can live longer.
Edit: you probably don’t use Apple, do you? Which may explain why you were so confused
I've had to relocate it all to a different location and so I have been living off the harvest. It's amazing how the worms and living soil organisms turned 18 tons of trash into soil and only took about 3 months for each batch. Working on a project to take it around UK 🇬🇧 and many thanks for your inspirational video and all the awesome you tube good people on our mother earth. Thank you for teaching us how to help heal the soil. The soil is like the skin of the earth.
Please keep posting your inspirational and helpful videos.
Ps. I'll be using the soil as starter soil and donate it free to others.
I've shared your videos far and wide for ages now.
Thank you!
I'm about to redesign and scale up my worm composting set-up, this was surprisingly helpful! It was interesting how much adding the grit near the end of the timelapse speeded up the breakdown for the middle section, which was lagging. I can definitely add crushed eggshells (we have 50 hens). I'm definitely going to have a clear perspex side so I can see what's happening underneath.
Sounds interesting - best of luck with it. Thanks for watching!
This video jogged my memory that in first grade my teacher had a worm dude visit us with his big compost bin full of worms and paper. We got to see how the worms ate the waste and made fresh soil. It was neat.
when I grow up I want to be a worm dude.
That's a bunch of happy little worms.
Very cool, I would never have thought to add ice. I’m going to do that now
Chamber 2 and Chamber 3 worms look like they were working together to escape and exact revenge on the person who imprisoned them there.
Worms are awesome. Can clearly see how they turn the soil and make it fertile.
Its like compost Tetris when you see the timelapse 🙃
Wow, you just filmed 100 days of footage. Kudos to you. 😯
I made a compost bin a few months ago, just for an experiment, and so far, so good. Food scraps have broken down bit by bit, and thanks to the soil I have, I don’t have to worry about watering it. And believe it or not, today, before I put some more dirt and food scraps in it, I stirred it so it can get some air, and I found a worm!
I’m so happy, that now my compost bin can break down a bit faster than usual.
Hopefully it tells its friends!😂
Open house - all wormies welcome! 👍🏻
@@A-V Yeah, exactly that! And also, I just discovered something new at work. In Walmart, in the Sporting goods, we now have live, and fresh worms. I think it said something like they’re Wrangler Worms or something. They’re for fishing. Are those good to put in my compost bin? Or no?
I am fairly sure that the worms they sell at Walmart for bait are worms that could be used for vermicomposting. In most cases the packaging specifies which type of worms they are selling you.... 👍🏻
I don't remember looking for this but it's apparently fascinating
When other people watched movie, I'm amused only by watching the worms
Fascinating. I'm a newly retired middle-school Science teacher, and I wish I'd had this a year or so ago.
Very cool. I have been anxiously awaiting the release of this video and it did not disappoint!
Fascinating and informative. Next time I harvest the castings I’m going to change what I I put in their tub. I have three tubs so I stagger doing the swap out. I’m sure the worms will want to to say thank you. My year round garden will benefit as well. 😊 thanks.
Love your time lapse vids!
I wonder, can you make 3 chamber time lapse with 1 chamber enc, 1 chamber red wrigglers and a 3rd chamber with no worms. I’m curious to see how natural decomposition goes without the worms.
I've been thinking of getting the three chamber container set up for another time-lapse soon. Your suggestion is a good one - I was thinking of a similar setup too. Thanks for watching!
Pretty cool. What would happen if the worms could travel back and forth between the containers. Perhaps cutoff the bottom bit of the dividers
Is be interested in seeing if the worms had a preference of material
This is why I love science and nature. Nature does so much for us it’s ridiculous.
Genius at work. Great video. Subtle and informative.
Lots of love from India.
I love your time lapse videos!! Great work!
I found it surprisingly enjoyable to watch. & the fast rewind & forwarding was a nice BONUS. TYVM. ALOHA
Thank you for watching - and Aloha to you too. Are you near the erupting volcano that I saw in the new yesterday? Be careful if you are! :)
Did you know that worms are equally as important to us than bees and other pollinators? Without them, we dead.
Exactly. It should be something that's taught to us in grammar school but isn't
@Daniel Scotton not everyone is american
@Daniel Scotton Wikipedia page in my native language says the opposite so I think I believe that more than your opinion. And how on earth speeding up the decompose can be harmful in any way? The faster sth gets recycled, the better for the environment. Also, introducing air into the soil has actually very beneficial means for the rooting systems and other fungi (they get more nitrogen and thus grows faster). P.s. Plants don't need organic matter to grow...
Earthworms are good for grasslands but not for any other biome
I’ve never added ice to mine and I’ve been doing vermiculture for a couple of decades now.
I love time lapse worm videos
Thank you for watching!
Worms, bees, meat eaters, vegens, we all help the world in our own way.
Damn...I never realized how much worms were nature’s blenders...
My friend in primary school used to go out at lunch time when it rained and save worms from the concrete. They called her worm girl. I respect worm girl.
:)
Amazing. I cant believe worms do so much for the environment. Thank you for letting me know. Subbed.
They, fungus, bacteria, and microbes are key for our soils! To my knowledge, soil was originally created by fungi that lived on rock. For a long time only fungi thrived on land, until the fungi had created soil and then plants came in.
Bruh that's gotta be worm heaven
holy shit youtube recommends, PLEASE give me more worm content, this was amazing to watch.
I am glad you enjoyed it. I invite you to browse around my channel - there are other similar time-lapse videos there. Hopefully you'll find others you enjoy. Thanks for watching!
After watching this I have one question:
Didn't the ink and colour harm the worms in some way?
I didn't look like it did, but it could be a long-term thing.
Interestingly, the ink in newspapers, magazines, and most other printing is considered “food safe”
The freshly made "soil" did look a lor lighter than the organic soil so I guess that's the answer
Paper itself has a ton of chemicals (which is why a paper cut really hurts) so if the worms with paper didn’t die, then the dye components should have no effect
@@Alphawolvess a wise wolve overhere
Der Restaurier They might not have long enough lifespans for it to have any adverse effects.
Those worms in the cardboard chamber must have been like "what the hell? this doesn't seem fair :/"
the music is fantastic!! kinda makes the worms dance too!
I agree. Thank you for watching!
Yes I was waiting for this one
The 1st section was easy to decompose, the third one took a while to decompose, while section 2 was the hardest to decompose.
When he added ice and grit...
I felt that
Love your time lapse vids. Looking forward to a watermelon.
So what I'm seeing is my hippy ex girlfriend was right when she said "You can compost anything"
I mean minus the obvious shit but like, you just turned cardboard into rich soil little wormies. Good job. Really proud of you
This really was a worm oddesey start to finish.
There's more where that came from - I invite you to please take a moment to browse my channel. Thanks for watching!
That moment when you realize that every delicious piece of fruit, every stalk of grain, every vegetable you've ever eaten, once had a part of it's existence covered in worm feces. Keep on working fellas. We need our decomposers! LOL
So would adding a shit ton of worms to our landfills help reduce their impact? Do we already do this?
cev5656 that’s exactly what happens at landfills. Once a landfill is considered “full” it’s left alone to allow the worms to turn the area into soil. Unfortunately a lot of landfills are flooded with toxic dump that kill worms which is why they never stop being landfills.
@@thisisamulyavanga the more you know! Thank you
@@thisisamulyavanga Cool! Thanks buddy!😊
@@thisisamulyavanga interesting
@@thisisamulyavanga thx m8