Hi Angela! I have been watching your videos for a couple of years now and still consider myself a newbie gardener. This video though takes the #1 spot for me out of all the gardening videos I have ever watched. I have never been so excited over worms! I believe it’s because I have seen first hand how important worms are for my garden. I immediately ordered buckets and am now on the search for worms in my area of northern California. If no luck, I’ll have to order them. Thanks so much for sharing! I can’t wait to put them in.
Excellent! I am a beginner on a budget. I buried plastic pots (with good drainage) in my raised veggies beds. Direct compost in them and put a second, slightly smaller pot inside first pots. The second pot has a little soil and something short and lightweight, like pansies. I pick the pansy pot up to add kitchen scraps and cardboard. It's happy from roots up. Compost us disposed if where dig won't get it. The worms and veggie beds are fed. Ta Da!
Oh my gosh. That's awesome. I thought I would have to have a separate container with a left and right side so they could feed on one side while the other remained the castings. This seems so much less maintenance. So glad you shared and so glad I saw this.
Hi Shaeray I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Dont forget to keep on adding the shredded cardboard so the worms have a bedding. I would do that rather than adding the soil maybe use a touch of sand for the grit they need. Other than that looks great thank you for sharing
Ha ha, I have cooked worms too, felt really bad about it! Love in bed vermicomposting!! One thing that I do is cut a hole the size of a small pot in the lid, and pop a potted plant in. That way I don't have to unscrew the lid to put food scraps in, I just take the pot out and put them in. Plus it looks prettier than those obvious white lids in my garden beds. Thanks for sharing - your worms look so happy!!!
Very good video. I have been successfully using in bed worm farms for over 10 years. Another tip; Ventilation holes are important along the top and top sides of the bucket. Grit super finely ground egg shells.
Great video. I noticed that here in Florida we have the same situation, where in the hotter months, the worms need to burrow deeper into cooler soil. So having the open bottom is a great solution.
What a great update! I love your videos, Angela. You are a great presenter and I appreciate your built in bullet points! Many blessings to you for sharing!
Hi Donna I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
I did it. I went to AZ worm farms today and got worms. Drilled holes in a bucket and got it into my garden bed. I’ve had pest problems and had a hard time getting my vegetables to grow, so starting with the soil. I planted some transplants today from AZ worm farm and I hope they make it! Thank you for this channel! I come back to it over and over!
Hi Joanie S I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Hey! Another Tucson gardener! I love it! I am "farming" the property I rent in the middle of town (Close to Reid Park), and having a blast! I started eight months ago tomorrow with a couple green onions I got from the store, and a small pile of kitchen scraps i tossed on the ground and said, "A compost pile!" (Ya gotta start somewhere!)
The first time, many years ago, when I put scrap in a bucket and saw the worms, I got scared, I did not know they were helpful. Always good to make own.
Well done video. I have chickens so they get all my scraps and make my compost, but if I ever stop having chickens I will do this. Great idea to have the buckets right in the garden.
2 years ago I had grown my worm bins to 32 count!!! I was originally going to sell kits at the farmers market and was set to pull the trigger when we had our Covid shut down. All that hard work. The shaded area that I stored the bins was no longer shady and I didn't have another location to store the bins so I had to make some exec. decisions. I happened to use 6 inch black pipe from a neighbor in construction and had 4 ct 3' pipes left. It takes up less garden bed space and is limited as to what you can put in. However I don't put any bedding in the bin. The worms live in my garden beds and only enter the tubes to feed. So the castings are readily available to the plants year around and the worms always move as temps require. I have some buckets that will be easy to convert to worm bins. Pretty soon I won't have any compost piles sitting around. The worms are hard workers. One note of caution: (Worms attract moles so if you hate moles you'll have to figure out if worms are the answer for you)
Tell me more about your narrow tubes. Did you put holes up and down the tube like done on the buckets on this video. Using black tubes, would that attract heat? Still don’t understand how worm castings would be readily available. I was going to do a worm farm but our Texas heat would probable kill them. Thanks!
@@TheRealHonestInquiry moles are much bigger than the holes on the buckets or tubes we use. Do you think making smaller holes will be good enough to stop attracting moles? Thank you
@@dianelanderson5504 I’m in Arizona high desert. My Vermihut sits in the bathroom for the same reason. It’s not as effective as using the worms directly in the garden, but the castings are so welcomed once harvested.
Thankyou for this video. I’ve been trying above ground composting in Vietnam and also concluded that it is just too hot for good worm activity. Now I will try your in-ground methods!
I live in an apartment and I have a good sized black bin on my deck for my worms and it works great. (it is mostly shaded and I live on the California coast where it doesn't get very hot) I love your method of integrating the worm bins directly into your raised beds. Very cool. :)
Hi Beth I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
This is great. I have a 125 gal. fish tank half buried in the ground within my greenhouse. It's a worm home plus seed starter area. But I had no way to really feed the worms without ripping up the dirt or drawing flies and bugs. So i cut the bottom off a protein shake container. Half in the dirt I screw off the top, add kitchen scraps and put the lid back on. Thank you so much for this great idea.
Hi Nancy I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
I love your videos! I am gardening in Mexico, Baja Sur to be exact, and we have a similar climate. My worms struggle in the summer and some die - I am totally going to try this. Thank you!
Thank you for the update! I have copied your beds and watering grid.(Made them ourselves) Great success so far, I want to do the in-bed worms next. I am learning how big various plants really are and how crowded the garden can get.... leading to aphids! But I just got some ladybugs and they are having a feast. Waiting for my praying mantis cocoons to hatch too. I am also in AZ (North Central Phoenix) Thanks for your great tips!
Hi Karen I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
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This video is amazing and I like how creative it is. I'm going to do the same thing thanks to your video. I'm learning a lot since I live in Arizona too
Thank you for sharing ..we do love vermi composting and it has been our bread and butter for more than a decade now, but i haven't use that on my garden like how you do it, it's indeed a great idea for my plants and to my worms as well, thank you much!!!
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I place my red wiggled in my raised beds this past summer. I have the opposite problem. Our winters are freezing for months. I did not think they would survive but last week the snow melted away from my raised beds and I had 2 big black garbage bags of leaves on one of the beds and when I lifted them up the ground was covered with red wiggles. So I made an early order of 24 bags of leaves for all of my raised beds for this coming winter 2021
Love hearing this. I've been getting a lot of questions about whether they will survive freezing temps. How deep are your beds and how low did the temps go, if you don't mind me asking?
@@GrowingInTheGarden Yeah, our nighttime temperature was and still is in the teens,. 20's, and low 30's. Our daytime temperatures were mostly 20's 30's and on a warm day 40's. In the month of February, we were hit with multiple snowstorms. So the beds had a couple feet of snow on them. Which is good insulation (so I was told). My beds are about 20 inches high I have a layer of cedar blocks as the base and 2x10 on top. I did not see any worms in the other beds. It is not to say the worms did not survive just I did not see them. Only in the bed with the bags of leaves. BUT this coming fall I'm adding large garbage bags full of leaves to all of the raised beds. For insurance that my hard-working red wiggles survive our winters.
I was just wondering about this. I would like to try worm composting, but have no idea how to keep them alive in winter. Dome of my beds are made with stones and " ground level" would the worms stay? Would it be ok if they " escaped" into the environment? 🤔
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Great video!!! One question, do you notice that ants or other pests gravitate towards your composting bins? I really want to do this, but with how many ants are in our yard I'm worried it would turn into a big ant hill.
I am in San Diego and have used in raised bed vermicomposting for over a year and have not experienced ants or other critters. The bin I use has a screw top lid. I hope you give it a try.
Excellent vid. We do this too, but we keep the bottoms and drill them too so you can lift the buckets we spread castings. One other thing: We rotate our bins. Fill one up, alternating browns (usually leaves or shredded mail) with greens (kitchen scraps, weeds, etc). Then move on to the next. By the time you cycle back, the first one's usually done. The biggest problem is a backlog of inputs, which we store in trash cans, during our frigid Ohio winters: we catch up by June, though.
I already harvested about 1/2 lb of worms from my inside worm bins and put those in 1 bucket and just today received an order of 1 lb of red wigglers which I divided up into 2 more buckets. While waiting on those worms already materials in the buckets and Im sure microbial action is started. Looking forward to see what happens in the next few months. Hopefully I will have luck similar to your fantastic work there. Totally impressed with what youve done.
I’m in the midst of an experiment: in the fall I buried a 5-gallon vermicomposting bucket in one of my 4x8 raised beds, and gradually filled it with layers of kitchen scraps, straw and half-finished compost. I’m anxiously waiting for warmer weather to see how it turns out!
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Try putting the bins under a nice shady tree/plant & insulate the ones in the beds with something such as Hessian Bags or even a few layers of old carpet👍
I start with one bucket of worms from the azwormfarm In a raised bed and now I'm funding red wigelers all around my yard🤩 before there were only brown worm
As Ive mentioned Im envious of what you have done there. One concern I have is when I was digging in the beds for my towers I hardly saw any worms. We shall see what happens.
Wow. I wish I could do something like that. I have some land but I can't because I'm in a wheelchair, but I garden in my balcony, it's also my laundry and I received as a gift a long raised bed. This winter here rained around 4 or 5 days it killed my some of my bananas. I have them in my raisedbed. Luckily I have them in different place.
I’m Texas. I just dig a shallow hole on the ground and bury some kitchen scraps then I have earth worms. It’s so amazing that they travel from my rose garden to vegetable garden.
Yes I wanted to make a trail every 3 months around my garden too. I may have to dig the hole as you say because the ants take over. Have you heard that cinnamon detracts ants? and doesn't harm worms?
I am so happy you answered the question about the heat. We live in Florida and was wondering the same thing. Thanks for the great information. Love to follow your channel. I also like SFG. We have six new beds going in and will have at least one worm bin in each.
Hi DrivingFree I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
im in az as well and tried to have in bucket worm composting. they did ok in the garage for the first couple of months, but eventually the heat got them. I might try this method out in our beds this year.
Your videos have become such a wealth of knowledge for me. I was debating a gardening conundrum this week, and literally thought, "What would Angela do?" ;'D I really want to give in-bed vermicomposting a try. However, my raised beds are only 23" deep. If I get some PVC instead of buckets, do you think I could get away with like 8" diameter tubes? Or is that not enough volume for the worms to work?
23 inches is plenty deep. You can always give it a try. Check out my latest video I share more about the process: ua-cam.com/video/GtYCOUp285g/v-deo.html
Thanks for watching! Don't forget to click the subscribe button if you enjoyed the video.
I will be starting these immediately.
Thank you for the advice!
I subscribed ❤🌻❤
thank you for the video! zone 10b here. hot summers! did you notice any differences/benefits to your soil or plants?
Excellent content, smooth clean editing. Love it.
Wonderful video! How many worms do you add to each bucket?
Thank you for all the info on worms. You make it sound easy and it’s going to be fun to try!
Yes, such a great way to self-fertilize😀 the garden. All the best from an Aussie worm farmer Marty
Hello from Arizona!
Hi Angela! I have been watching your videos for a couple of years now and still consider myself a newbie gardener. This video though takes the #1 spot for me out of all the gardening videos I have ever watched. I have never been so excited over worms! I believe it’s because I have seen first hand how important worms are for my garden. I immediately ordered buckets and am now on the search for worms in my area of northern California. If no luck, I’ll have to order them. Thanks so much for sharing! I can’t wait to put them in.
Thanks so much. Good luck!
Excellent! I am a beginner on a budget. I buried plastic pots (with good drainage) in my raised veggies beds. Direct compost in them and put a second, slightly smaller pot inside first pots. The second pot has a little soil and something short and lightweight, like pansies. I pick the pansy pot up to add kitchen scraps and cardboard. It's happy from roots up. Compost us disposed if where dig won't get it. The worms and veggie beds are fed. Ta Da!
I appreciate that they don’t take as much room in the beds as the wooden one you showed in the video.
Oh my gosh. That's awesome. I thought I would have to have a separate container with a left and right side so they could feed on one side while the other remained the castings. This seems so much less maintenance. So glad you shared and so glad I saw this.
Hi Shaeray I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Dont forget to keep on adding the shredded cardboard so the worms have a bedding. I would do that rather than adding the soil maybe use a touch of sand for the grit they need. Other than that looks great thank you for sharing
You cant argue with what Angela has done , Angela keep right on truckin'.
Ha ha, I have cooked worms too, felt really bad about it! Love in bed vermicomposting!! One thing that I do is cut a hole the size of a small pot in the lid, and pop a potted plant in. That way I don't have to unscrew the lid to put food scraps in, I just take the pot out and put them in. Plus it looks prettier than those obvious white lids in my garden beds. Thanks for sharing - your worms look so happy!!!
Great tip!
Thanks for this tip. I was dreading seeing the lid! Love your idea
@@sheilahenry7279 so glad you like the idea, hope you try it!
Very good video. I have been successfully using in bed worm farms for over 10 years. Another tip; Ventilation holes are important along the top and top sides of the bucket. Grit super finely ground egg shells.
Are you suggesting holes on the lids or the the top couple inches of the bucket, or both?
Snails and slugs can take over the bucket so not sure about holes above ground
I heard that fruit flies can get in, you can put a screen on the top.
I have 3 bins around my garden. Such a great ideas!!! So many warms and healthy compost. Love it!!! Thank you.
Thank you for being very thorough! I love how you shared all parts of this process and addressed many questions and issues.
Great video. I noticed that here in Florida we have the same situation, where in the hotter months, the worms need to burrow deeper into cooler soil. So having the open bottom is a great solution.
It seems to work well.
The joy of bringing a worm to bed is very relatable har har.
What a great update! I love your videos, Angela. You are a great presenter and I appreciate your built in bullet points! Many blessings to you for sharing!
Hi Donna I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
I did it. I went to AZ worm farms today and got worms. Drilled holes in a bucket and got it into my garden bed. I’ve had pest problems and had a hard time getting my vegetables to grow, so starting with the soil. I planted some transplants today from AZ worm farm and I hope they make it! Thank you for this channel! I come back to it over and over!
That is awesome! Thanks for watching!
I did the same thing with 4" PVC and was very happy with the results. I like the bucket idea. Great way to reuse the bucket, and it comes with a lid!
It's a simple idea that can be implemented many ways. Thanks for watching.
Hi
Ooh! 4” pvc is a good idea for smaller spaces - good idea!
Yeah, I reckon the lid would keep off the worst of the heat and also prevent vermin going in there foraging for food scraps.
4" PVC wide enough to drop everything in there easily?
This was VERY helpful. Thank you! My first attempt at a standalone worm bin didn't go so well. Gonna try this instead. 👍🏾
Good luck!
I definitely want to do this! The boxes take up so much room, but two (2) gallon buckets are much easier and take up less space. Thank you!
I start now colture worms. Thank you very much sharing.bless you ma'am
Hi Joanie S I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Hey! Another Tucson gardener! I love it!
I am "farming" the property I rent in the middle of town (Close to Reid Park), and having a blast! I started eight months ago tomorrow with a couple green onions I got from the store, and a small pile of kitchen scraps i tossed on the ground and said, "A compost pile!" (Ya gotta start somewhere!)
The first time, many years ago, when I put scrap in a bucket and saw the worms, I got scared, I did not know they were helpful. Always good to make own.
Wonderful.
Well done video. I have chickens so they get all my scraps and make my compost, but if I ever stop having chickens I will do this. Great idea to have the buckets right in the garden.
Sounds great!
2 years ago I had grown my worm bins to 32 count!!! I was originally going to sell kits at the farmers market and was set to pull the trigger when we had our Covid shut down. All that hard work. The shaded area that I stored the bins was no longer shady and I didn't have another location to store the bins so I had to make some exec. decisions. I happened to use 6 inch black pipe from a neighbor in construction and had 4 ct 3' pipes left. It takes up less garden bed space and is limited as to what you can put in. However I don't put any bedding in the bin. The worms live in my garden beds and only enter the tubes to feed. So the castings are readily available to the plants year around and the worms always move as temps require. I have some buckets that will be easy to convert to worm bins. Pretty soon I won't have any compost piles sitting around. The worms are hard workers. One note of caution: (Worms attract moles so if you hate moles you'll have to figure out if worms are the answer for you)
You could also line your beds with hardware cloth to keep moles & voles out
Tell me more about your narrow tubes. Did you put holes up and down the tube like done on the buckets on this video. Using black tubes, would that attract heat? Still don’t understand how worm castings would be readily available. I was going to do a worm farm but our Texas heat would probable kill them. Thanks!
@@TheRealHonestInquiry moles are much bigger than the holes on the buckets or tubes we use. Do you think making smaller holes will be good enough to stop attracting moles? Thank you
@@dianelanderson5504 I’m in Arizona high desert. My Vermihut sits in the bathroom for the same reason. It’s not as effective as using the worms directly in the garden, but the castings are so welcomed once harvested.
@@SharonRepici Your bin is in the house because of moles/preditors?
Thankyou for this video. I’ve been trying above ground composting in Vietnam and also concluded that it is just too hot for good worm activity. Now I will try your in-ground methods!
I live in an apartment and I have a good sized black bin on my deck for my worms and it works great. (it is mostly shaded and I live on the California coast where it doesn't get very hot) I love your method of integrating the worm bins directly into your raised beds. Very cool. :)
Nice. That weather sounds wonderful, enjoy!
Hi Beth I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
This is great. I have a 125 gal. fish tank half buried in the ground within my greenhouse. It's a worm home plus seed starter area. But I had no way to really feed the worms without ripping up the dirt or drawing flies and bugs. So i cut the bottom off a protein shake container. Half in the dirt I screw off the top, add kitchen scraps and put the lid back on. Thank you so much for this great idea.
Nice. Best of luck to you.
Hi Nancy I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
this was so helpful! thank you very much for sharing htis
You're so welcome!
Thank you for this video! It helped answer some questions I had.
Glad it was helpful!
I love your videos! I am gardening in Mexico, Baja Sur to be exact, and we have a similar climate. My worms struggle in the summer and some die - I am totally going to try this. Thank you!
Best of luck to you!
Another great content with the gracious Angela
Thank you for the update! I have copied your beds and watering grid.(Made them ourselves) Great success so far, I want to do the in-bed worms next. I am learning how big various plants really are and how crowded the garden can get.... leading to aphids! But I just got some ladybugs and they are having a feast. Waiting for my praying mantis cocoons to hatch too. I am also in AZ (North Central Phoenix) Thanks for your great tips!
Best of luck!
Hi Karen I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Thank you for taking the time out to share!
I just love your videos - such elegance in gardening!!! Great content - keep up the great work.
Thanks so much!
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I just put my worms into this style set up.Thanks for videos
Really great idea! Your garden area is beautiful. I love how you have it laid out. Good job.
Thanks so much! 😊
@@GrowingInTheGarden You are very welcome. Have a great weekend- Ronnie
This video is amazing and I like how creative it is. I'm going to do the same thing thanks to your video. I'm learning a lot since I live in Arizona too
This is fantastic! What a great idea. I will definitely try this. Thank you ❣️
You are so welcome!
This is the most novel idea/tip that I have seen. Consider me subscribed
Thank you for sharing ..we do love vermi composting and it has been our bread and butter for more than a decade now, but i haven't use that on my garden like how you do it, it's indeed a great idea for my plants and to my worms as well, thank you much!!!
Wonderful!
Hi Pergola Natural I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
I haven’t got room for a compost bin or pile yet so I will definitely be doing this in my raised beds
Merci from Montreal, Canada.
I can't believe it took me so long to find your channel.
Subscribed
I place my red wiggled in my raised beds this past summer. I have the opposite problem. Our winters are freezing for months. I did not think they would survive but last week the snow melted away from my raised beds and I had 2 big black garbage bags of leaves on one of the beds and when I lifted them up the ground was covered with red wiggles. So I made an early order of 24 bags of leaves for all of my raised beds for this coming winter 2021
Love hearing this. I've been getting a lot of questions about whether they will survive freezing temps. How deep are your beds and how low did the temps go, if you don't mind me asking?
@@GrowingInTheGarden Yeah, our nighttime temperature was and still is in the teens,. 20's, and low 30's. Our daytime temperatures were mostly 20's 30's and on a warm day 40's. In the month of February, we were hit with multiple snowstorms. So the beds had a couple feet of snow on them. Which is good insulation (so I was told). My beds are about 20 inches high I have a layer of cedar blocks as the base and 2x10 on top. I did not see any worms in the other beds. It is not to say the worms did not survive just I did not see them. Only in the bed with the bags of leaves. BUT this coming fall I'm adding large garbage bags full of leaves to all of the raised beds. For insurance that my hard-working red wiggles survive our winters.
@@cqammaz53 Another video says they either go deeper or they die and you're seeing the birth of their babies because the eggs can survive.
@@cqammaz53 oh and I have ants take over whenever I add leaves but maybe there is another reason.
I was just wondering about this. I would like to try worm composting, but have no idea how to keep them alive in winter. Dome of my beds are made with stones and " ground level" would the worms stay? Would it be ok if they " escaped" into the environment? 🤔
Beautiful beautiful work. Lovely idea I'll implement it
Beautiful garden 🤩 , I’m gonna try this next to my needy papayas that I can’t seem to keep them fertilized enough !
Good luck!
Thank-you! Compost that doesn't has become a problem here. Eventually it breaks down, but SO slowly! This seems like a great process! I Subscribed!
Hi Patricia I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Thank you !! I will definitely do that looks way easier 😊
You’re welcome 😊
This is brilliant I'm going to propose this idea to my community garden. Regular transportation of compost is back breaking work.
Best of luck to you!
Great video!!! One question, do you notice that ants or other pests gravitate towards your composting bins? I really want to do this, but with how many ants are in our yard I'm worried it would turn into a big ant hill.
I am in San Diego and have used in raised bed vermicomposting for over a year and have not experienced ants or other critters. The bin I use has a screw top lid. I hope you give it a try.
After watching your video I watched lots of others on the subject but yours is the one I liked the best. Thank you.
Thanks!
This was really interesting. I have started a vermiculture bin in my basement. Is this something that can be adapted for cold climates?
I am not sure. I would check with local gardeners to see what they think.
Thanks! I will ask around!
Superb Video! Thanks For Posting!!!!
Excellent vid. We do this too, but we keep the bottoms and drill them too so you can lift the buckets we spread castings. One other thing: We rotate our bins. Fill one up, alternating browns (usually leaves or shredded mail) with greens (kitchen scraps, weeds, etc). Then move on to the next. By the time you cycle back, the first one's usually done. The biggest problem is a backlog of inputs, which we store in trash cans, during our frigid Ohio winters: we catch up by June, though.
Your way sounds so organized! I love it. Great ideas.
@@GrowingInTheGarden Well, you know engineers. :-)
@@The.Ghost.of.Tom.Joad. I could use a little more engineer, little less artist in me sometimes. That's awesome!
I am in northern MI, very cold winters. Will the worms die off?
I already harvested about 1/2 lb of worms from my inside worm bins and put those in 1 bucket and just today received an order of 1 lb of red wigglers which I divided up into 2 more buckets. While waiting on those worms already materials in the buckets and Im sure microbial action is started. Looking forward to see what happens in the next few months. Hopefully I will have luck similar to your fantastic work there. Totally impressed with what youve done.
Marvellous idea.
Thank you
Now I can start composting in my garden
Best of luck to you!
Very helpful video and beautiful garden!
That’s really smart !! Let me steal this idea!!!
Ive neglected one of my beds and noted that there are few worms in it , going to add more compost especially around the worm towers.
Really awesome
I’m in the midst of an experiment: in the fall I buried a 5-gallon vermicomposting bucket in one of my 4x8 raised beds, and gradually filled it with layers of kitchen scraps, straw and half-finished compost. I’m anxiously waiting for warmer weather to see how it turns out!
Nice. Let me know how it goes.
Hi Wayne I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Very helpful! I cover beds with leaves and kitchen scraps. There are lots of worms. I might try this and see if I get more worms. Thank you.
Thanks for watching.
Hi Leanne I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
vermicomposting for the whole bed is better than just bins ;)
Thanks for this. Worked like a dream!
Hi Anne I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Thank you for responding to my message, I have a worm bin as well but like you said ,need a lots attention,have a good day.
Thanks, you too!
that is just brilliant
Just learning all I can about gardening and feeding the soil... thank you this is something I think I will try.
You can do it!
Thanks so much about what I have learned in this video.❤❤❤
I love that!amazing ...
Fantastic explanation and I’m excited to add this to all my beds!!
Hi Janice I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
Thank you so much!!! What a great way to compost!
Glad it was helpful!
i love this so much. i will try it this year. i do bokashi composting and find it messy and stinky. This seems more low maintenance
Try putting the bins under a nice shady tree/plant & insulate the ones in the beds with something such as Hessian Bags or even a few layers of old carpet👍
Thank you!
You're welcome!
Thank you Elizabeth Moss !
Ha! Thanks for watching.
It could be fun to paint the tops of the buckets like sunflowers or something. I've got my buckets and will be trying this soon , thank you!
Well done!
Excellent video! Thank you so much for your support in gardening!
I start with one bucket of worms from the azwormfarm In a raised bed and now I'm funding red wigelers all around my yard🤩 before there were only brown worm
Nice!
Super guidence
Thanks for watching.
💩🪱🧑🌾🇨🇦Worms are all over our garden!
Nice!
You have done a great job explaining your Vermicomposting Bins. Wonderful!
Best way to do vermicomposting.
I agree!
As Ive mentioned Im envious of what you have done there. One concern I have is when I was digging in the beds for my towers I hardly saw any worms. We shall see what happens.
Thank you Angela...find this helpful
Thanks so much.
I'm gonna do this!
Read through this blogpost for some updated options and FAQ growinginthegarden.com/vermicomposting-made-easy-in-bed-worm-composting/
:
The Able Gardener has some great videos on these in bed bins
Thanks for the tip.
I have been having same problems in our hot Perth weather , worms ceased to exist. Have been thinking about doing similar
Thank you for the cool idea! As soon as the sun comes up I’ll try it.
Best of luck to you!
Wow. I wish I could do something like that. I have some land but I can't because I'm in a wheelchair, but I garden in my balcony, it's also my laundry and I received as a gift a long raised bed. This winter here rained around 4 or 5 days it killed my some of my bananas. I have them in my raisedbed. Luckily I have them in different place.
Very cool!
Thanks
I’m Texas. I just dig a shallow hole on the ground and bury some kitchen scraps then I have earth worms. It’s so amazing that they travel from my rose garden to vegetable garden.
Perfect.
Yes I wanted to make a trail every 3 months around my garden too. I may have to dig the hole as you say because the ants take over. Have you heard that cinnamon detracts ants? and doesn't harm worms?
Great tip. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you so kindly awesome ideas
Glad you like them!
Awesome. Ty
I am so happy you answered the question about the heat. We live in Florida and was wondering the same thing. Thanks for the great information. Love to follow your channel. I also like SFG. We have six new beds going in and will have at least one worm bin in each.
Wonderful! Enjoy those new beds. Hello from Arizona!
Hi DrivingFree I hope my comment didn't sound as a form of privacy invasion your comment tells of a wonderful woman man with a beautiful heart which led me to comment I don't normally write in the comment section but I think you deserve this complement. If you don’t mind can we be friends? Thanks God bless you….🌹🌹🌹🌹
This video helps a lot
Great job 👍 u have a nice smile
im in az as well and tried to have in bucket worm composting. they did ok in the garage for the first couple of months, but eventually the heat got them. I might try this method out in our beds this year.
Good luck!
Your videos have become such a wealth of knowledge for me. I was debating a gardening conundrum this week, and literally thought, "What would Angela do?" ;'D
I really want to give in-bed vermicomposting a try. However, my raised beds are only 23" deep. If I get some PVC instead of buckets, do you think I could get away with like 8" diameter tubes? Or is that not enough volume for the worms to work?
23 inches is plenty deep. You can always give it a try. Check out my latest video I share more about the process: ua-cam.com/video/GtYCOUp285g/v-deo.html
Thank you for your information you have given me
So nice of you