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Vermicomposting with Worms in the kitchen

Vermicomposting with Worms in the kitchen

Vermicomposting - aka: Wormeries are becoming big business, its cheap, eco friendly, educational and it doesnt smell

I am seriously considering buying a wormery to recycle all my kitchen waste into compost, i was considering just a small wormery that would fit in my kitchen, my flatmate isnt too keen on having worms in the flat, but the idea of these little guys breaking down all that waste food and peelings and paper into eco fertiliser…. well it gets me unusually excited (dont ask).

little girl enjoying the wormery

little girl enjoying the wormery

How does it work:

Firstly wormery worms are different from regular earth worms, a compost worm eats and lives on the decaying foods on the surface, whereas a garden worm burrows deep into the ground. The most popular wormery worm is the ‘tiger worm’, that has striped markings (thus the name).

a tiger worm

a tiger worm

Wormeries house thousands of these tiger worms along with plant food and organic kitchen waste and utilising the worms unique ability to break down kitchen waste into highly plant nutrious liquid fertiliser.

But isnt it a hassle to keep worms, we dont throw that much edible food away, do we?

About half of the 6.7 million tonnes of food thrown in the bin each year is edible and the rest comprises waste such as peelings and bones.
Food accounts for 19% of domestic waste, cooked food is more likely to be thrown away than raw ingredients and fruit and vegetables are the most common uncooked foods to be discarded.
All this waste then gets taken to landfill sites around the UK which are not only nearly full, but also account for a huge percentage of methane emissions (one of the greenhouse gases) that pollute our atmosphere.

Quote from Wormcity

What you can feed your worms

  • You CAN feed your worms
  • Paper
  • Cardboard
  • Fruit and Vegetable peelings
  • Citrus fruits
  • Pasta and rice
  • Coffee grounds and tea bags
  • Pet and human hair (urgh)
  • Cereals
  • Sugar
  • Pizza and bread
  • Leaves
  • Baked beans
  • Small amount of dead flowers

What NOT to feed your worms

  • Meat and Fish
  • Bones
  • Garlic / Onion and salt
  • Diary products like milk, cheese, butter and eggs
  • Insecticides and pesticides
  • Solvents
  • Curry (spicy foods)
  • Lawn cuttings
  • Non biodegradable materials like plastic

What kind of wormeries are there?

Wormeries are plastic containers that look a bit like water butts or in some cases boxes. They can be stacked and usually have a tap right at the bottom for releasing the liquid fertiliser.

Some examples of wormeries:

There all all kinds of wormeries in every shape and size, some a tiny buckets, some are massive long containers and some look just like plant pots. I’ll list a number of stockists at the end to this post.

kids wormery

kids wormery

Executive wormery

Executive wormery

plant garden wormery

plant garden wormery

Where can you keep your worms?

Your wormery can be kept outside or inside depending apon the type you have, they apparently ‘do not smell’ so could be kept indoors. You could, if you dont have a garden like me, keep it on the balcony.. it is best to bring it in though in winter or you poor little worms could freeze. I suppose its a bit like that dinosaur that lived under the sink in the Flintstones, you just have a load of living things eating all your rubbish for you, which is kind of cool.

Anyway, i will keep you all posted on the wormery situation and any of you that have a wormery and want to tell us about it, please do. In the meantime here are those wormery stockists:

  1. worm city wormeries
  2. original organics wormeries
  3. Wiggly wigglers wormeries (these guys have a superb podcast)
  4. recycle works
tiger worms feeding

tiger worms feeding

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Which Green Actions Matter Most?

Which Green Actions Matter Most?

Now!

Now!

I found this article, Which Green Actions Matter Most at PlanetGreen, courtesty of JollyGreenGirl, who I started following this afternoon on Twitter. Having seen her tweet about it, I decided to have a look and what I saw made me happy - actually Twitter has been helping me feel happy all afternoon - I found a lot of companies and individuals who seem to be on a similar wave length to that of Minkbaby - making important changes one at a time.

I thought I would pay it forward, as it were and pass this article on, by publishing an excerpt here:

“Which Green Actions Matter Most?: A Look at Creative Green Solutions To Real Ecological Problems

By Josh Peterson

Scott Badenoch is the Co-founder and CEO of CreativeCitizen.com, the wiki for green living. Besides being an active lawyer and a member of the California State Bar, he is also a writer for TriplePundit and EcoTimes. He has a Juris Doctorate, a Master’s degree in Mediation, Negotiation and Arbitration and a Bachelor’s degree in poetry.
What is Creative Citizen?

Creative Citizen is a mental shift: humans don’t always have to be users and abusers, they can also be creators. Instead of continuing down the same path of global unawareness and consumption, a Creative Citizen reduces worldwide problems to daily, personal solutions. Our goal here is to help each person see how little acts have truly big effects.

Creative Citizen equips individuals and communities to move forward in the quest to become responsible global citizens. Instead of focusing on the fear induced by water shortages, expanding landfills, smoggy cities and the specter of global warming, we focus on one action at a time, knowing that a series of small actions can lead to massive results.

PG: Tell us How Users Can Best Utilize Creative Citizen

Scott Badenoch: We made Creative Citizen as simple as possible for people in terms of you do not have to be a registered user to view all of the content there. We do not believe in, sort of, hoarding environmentalism or creating more barriers of entry for people. In order to actually edit the body of solutions you have to register so we know it’s not spam, but every bit of information on that website is accessible to the user regardless of whether or not you register. So it is a very simple format in terms of that.

What we encourage people to do is really take environmentalism in an incremental fashion and know that you canā??t solve the world’s global warming problems with the flip of a switch. And most people simply don’t have access to the types of things like Al Gore would have to really effectuate change at a global level.

What really matters for the individuals is what they can do in their own lives and in their home and in their sphere of influence. And at the same time, being green is not just a decision that you make. It is a step-by-step process where you really analyze the things that you do in your life and figure out if you are doing them in the most effective way for yourself and for the planet.

The majority of being green actually is habit-based, meaning things that don’t cost you anything but yet yield savings in terms of your resources or directly in terms of your finances. This is what we’ve done. We’ve helped people to get into a process of learning and relearning the things that you can do every day…”

To read the rest of this article and the second part go here.

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