Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Friday, June 12, 2009
worm for planting
How worm works to plant
Placing the Worm Palace is easy. Just dig a hole in the garden and plant the Worm preferably Palace inside. Close by worms will locate fruits and vegetables scraps you place inside the Worm Palace, eat from them, and travel back into the soil to spread the worm castings and worm juice that only worms can produce. These worm castings definitely fertilize soil. They also ventilate it to allow water to reach plant roots more simply.
Instructions for use worm to plant
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2. Ensure the soil at the base of the Worm Palace to set it in place.
3. Put fruit and vegetable scraps in the Worm Palace and place the cap to keep light and insects out. Maintain feeding the Worm Palace with food scraps. Worms will eliminate these scraps through the base of the Worm Palace to increase fertilize your garden with nutrients. In shining days, lift the Worm Palace's cover to allow excess heat to escape. In a hot day, worms will travel out of the Worm Palace to arrive the cooler soil below, come back to their food source once the temperature drops. Worms do not like daylight.
4. Pour some garden worms to develop the start of the worm population. Use droppings worms if you have them available, but remember that droppings worms may leave the area if conditions are less than ideal. When the Worm Palace has been planted, more worms will place it and breed up in this food source before spreading out into the whole garden. Let a month or two for the worm population spread the Worm Palace to increase before you add a large quantities of kitchen waste.
5. Parting food scraps down to worm-manageable chunks rather than whole allows them to be used faster. Avoid adding odors oils, pesticides and chemicals, meat and dairy products that attract flies and make putrefying. These can kill your worms.
6. No need to pour water into the Worm Palace. Being dependent, the Worm Palace will produce its own moisture from food scraps if its cover is sealed. Adding some water may drown the worms inside the soil.
Placing the Worm Palace is easy. Just dig a hole in the garden and plant the Worm preferably Palace inside. Close by worms will locate fruits and vegetables scraps you place inside the Worm Palace, eat from them, and travel back into the soil to spread the worm castings and worm juice that only worms can produce. These worm castings definitely fertilize soil. They also ventilate it to allow water to reach plant roots more simply.Instructions for use worm to plant
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1. Dig a hole in the ground, preferably in shade or the south side of a wall, and plant the Worm Palace like a plant. Install the base in deep enough to cover up the worm doorways in the base with soil. This allows worms to spread in and out under the protective cover of soil. Make sure that the Worm Palace is in a right position. Do not dig it in very deep, as worms generally spread in the top few hundred millimeters of soil.
2. Ensure the soil at the base of the Worm Palace to set it in place.
3. Put fruit and vegetable scraps in the Worm Palace and place the cap to keep light and insects out. Maintain feeding the Worm Palace with food scraps. Worms will eliminate these scraps through the base of the Worm Palace to increase fertilize your garden with nutrients. In shining days, lift the Worm Palace's cover to allow excess heat to escape. In a hot day, worms will travel out of the Worm Palace to arrive the cooler soil below, come back to their food source once the temperature drops. Worms do not like daylight.
4. Pour some garden worms to develop the start of the worm population. Use droppings worms if you have them available, but remember that droppings worms may leave the area if conditions are less than ideal. When the Worm Palace has been planted, more worms will place it and breed up in this food source before spreading out into the whole garden. Let a month or two for the worm population spread the Worm Palace to increase before you add a large quantities of kitchen waste.
5. Parting food scraps down to worm-manageable chunks rather than whole allows them to be used faster. Avoid adding odors oils, pesticides and chemicals, meat and dairy products that attract flies and make putrefying. These can kill your worms.
6. No need to pour water into the Worm Palace. Being dependent, the Worm Palace will produce its own moisture from food scraps if its cover is sealed. Adding some water may drown the worms inside the soil.
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