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Worm Farming: Protecting Your Worms

You work hard at keeping your worms healthy and happy. The last thing you want is for predators to get at your worms and eat up the fruits of your labor. You have to keep your worms safe from predators and other dangers as well.

 

Medication

For example, you need to keep medications away from your worms. Keep that in mind if you add manure to your worm food. Manure from livestock might have traces of medication which could harm your worms.

Children

Children will be drawn to your worm farm and would love to play with the worms but they can be hazardous to the health of your worms. Don't let children have access to your worms without being supervised.

Improper drainage

You need to let excess water drain from your worm bins. Either install a spout in the bottom or drill holes n the bottom to allow water to drain out.

Chemicals

Make sure you do not use contaminated water. Soak your cardboard pieces in clean water from your tap and not water that might be contaminated with pesticides. Do not add grass clippings that might be treated with chemicals.

Predators

Predators will be your fiercest competition when it comes to the safety of your worms. Hedgehogs, foxes, moles, snakes, toads, slugs, birds, leeches, beetles and parasites all love to eat worms. Make sure you keep your worm farm covered with screening with a mesh that is small enough that worms can get out and predators can't get in. Parasites, cluster flies and mites can also be dangerous predators which is another reason you may want to avoid using manure and meat as food sources for your worms. Maggot infestations can eat up the food you intend for the worms to eat. If the worms don't get enough food they will try to escape or become unhealthy. So even if a predator doesn't eat the worm, if it eats the worm's food then your worms will suffer.

Also be prepared to crafty predators such as raccoons since they are notorious for figuring out how to get inside containers! To keep birds disinterested in your worm container, set up bird feeders in another area of your yard.

Thieves

If it is well known you have a worm farm you may have to worry about thieves of the human kind that come and help themselves to some live bait.

To protect your worms from many of the above dangers you may want to place your worm bin inside of a shed that has a concrete floor and which can be locked. You can provide further protection if you can somehow place your worm bin on a pedestal which you can sit in a tub of water.

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How To Harvest Worms Headlines

Climate change impacts on mophane worm - Botswana Press Agency


Climate change impacts on mophane worm
Botswana Press Agency
Phane harvesters in Tonota have indicated how the effects of climate change have caught up with the manner of harvesting of the worm. Ms Musa Tamocha said, ...

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State delays clam, oyster seasons at Hope Island State Park - TheNewsTribune.com


State delays clam, oyster seasons at Hope Island State Park
TheNewsTribune.com
Spanaway: Dock anglers are catching a few fish with worms and marshmallows on 3- to 5-foot leaders. Boaters are catching fish off the swimming hole. ...

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Is this the year to grow your own? - Calgary Herald


Is this the year to grow your own?
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Once the plants or seedlings are growing, add grass clippings to the soil surface, letting the worms dig them in for you this summer. ...

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The bug guy - Merced Sun-Star


The bug guy
Merced Sun-Star
Now he travels around the world visiting classrooms to tell other kids (and grownups too) about worms and crickets and roly-polies. ...

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Scott Turner: Sifting through the stock of the sea - Providence Journal


Providence Journal

Scott Turner: Sifting through the stock of the sea
Providence Journal
... and worked over by the worms. Before heading back to the family, I came upon a harvest's worth of the glassy-looking sheets of algae called sea lettuce. ...

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