//www.wormfarmingrevealed.com/start-a-worm-farm.html Worms are all over you just need to attract them by laying out some bait. This can be as simple as ...
Some of them are a night crawler. But the ones that I'm talking about do not flatten there tail, the mail pore is not visible, and the clitellum is very smooth. This would render it not a Nightcrawler.
How to Find Earth Worms
Have fun and try it yourself!
How to Find Worms for Your Fish Hook | Survival Skills
Learn here how to REALLY use your new iPhone //bit.ly/1UKdTgJ Watch more How to Survive in the Wilderness videos: ...
how to find free fishing bait out when your fishing you need some live bait you just turn over logs or rocks that been sitting for awhile the worms hide under their ...
When I'm fishing farm ponds, I usually turn over some dried up cow patties.
There are tons of worms to be found under them! Just be sure to clean out
from under your fingernails later that night...LOL.
we have a plywood sheet on the ground, and wen were ready we go lift up the
peice of plywood and we find worms atleast 12 inches long to worms bout an
inch hundreds of them
excellent share Bro and a piece of knowledge that may save a Life or at
minimum a bit of pride keeping someone from getting skunked on a great day
of fishin'. ;-)
Catch more bait than you need using this trick. Black walnuts ripen in the fall and contain Juglone, a chemical that is toxic to fish and apparently earthworms too.
The black walnut makes toxins that kill all other trees and plants besides
walnuts. Make sure not to dump the the juice around other plants, except
walnut trees.
If that were true, how come there are so many other plants and trees growing under the walnut tree? Juglone doesn't kill everything but it is toxic to some plants, for example tomatoes - don't grow them under the drip line of a walnut tree
Mustard contains a toxic for worms too! it irritates their skin! mix some
water and mustard on pour it on soil and wait eventually they will come out
too! :) try that and see if it works!
Compost Worms, finding your own. Which worms are correct?
//www.FreeRangeChickens.org brings this short video, showing worms on pavement after a night of steady rain. Not ALL worms will thrive in a compost bin.
Sort of like a city neighborhood where every one lives together. Same
species tend to live together or in groups. All eat basically the same food
but different species prefer certain types of food over others. All are
looking to mate but usually within their own species. Just as most of us,
they are just trying to find a little food, a little love, and their own
slice of the pie.
+SuperSaltydog77 I love this analogy in light of the 'illegal immigrants' they are bringing into Europe right now....Waaayyyy off subject! My apologies.
Those all look like night crawlers lol but it's day time but people say
those are not good I have a bin with only huge earth worms an they eat
everything an are getting even bigger why do people say not to use them
+Adrian Garcia Some worm species do better than others... it's not so much "not to use them" as some species just do more work than others. Night crawlers generally are photo-sensitive and also require the ability to go very deep in the ground. A worm bin doesn't offer that. All worms actually ingest dead organic material...
Hello Frederick I have just posted a video where I rescue some earthworms
from my drive and relocate them in a raised bed. Are these those Red
Wrigglers? you talk about and dose it matter.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i264OYc-YoY
If they are not going into an enclosed bin... it really doesn't matter what worm species you are getting for your raised bed. They will do their job of decomposing dead material there while improving drainage and nutrition for your plantings via castings. In fact, if you are getting some night crawlers, they will go deeper than other species... so even better!
Great presentation! Do you know of a composting worm chart for reference
purposes?
Are you sure your wife doesn't mind you using her spatula or is that just
guy logic talking? Thanks for the info!!
The spatula comment was very funny. Would a chart be something that someone would think was a helpful tool to have? I'm new to composting and know absolutely nothing about worms. Are the composting worms the same as the worms people use when fishing? Totally dumb on worm knowledge, but very interested.
The spatula reference was just a joke... it's a great worm flipper. I haven't seen a worm composting chart... I'll keep my eye out for one and post a link if I find it.
when i bought red wigglers a few decades ago they were small,red thin quick
worms...too small for an average fish hook......i don't think any of your
worms are authentic red wigglers...sorry
I have to agree with you commonconservative... they were simply good earth worms... they work in compost, but are not as effective as true red wigglers... thanks for posting...
How to catch worms with dish washing liquid
A quick tutorial on how to catch worms(Great for getting free bait for fishing)
Ok to answer some of your questions. It is a pony tail not a mullet. Second
this is not the only trick that works I simply find it to be the easiest.
Third yes there have to be worms present to catch any the soap does not
create worms. Fourth it is my opinion that worms don't have souls think
what you wish I just think the very idea of worm souls is stupid. Fifth the
quality of my camera 3 years ago has nothing to do with the information
provided in the video. And finally thanks for viewing and your comments
positive or not I appreciate your input
+SmoothRide Scooter alright, then lets go straight to your math since in your old age I think your mind isn't quite as sharp as it may have once been. even if he used a full 1.5 oz, which i think its was less than, that is still less than 15 cents for the worms he caught, and that is figuring the price for Dawn dish soap, not some generic brand. So, in your infinite old wisdom, where do you buy fish for 15 cents?
+Not EvenLOL.....dude, I don't know who you think you are talking to...but I can assure you, I am much older that yourself. My grand kids would all agree, as well.Unlike you, I do not live in my parent's basement and spend my time playing video games. Hence, my "mom" doe not provide for my family.
Let's do a little calculating here from what we saw in this video: 1.5 ounces of dish soap for every one worm caught...well, never mind. Suffice it to say, you'd be better off just going to the grocery store and buying your fish. With all that money you're spend for dish soap, you could instead be eating commercially grown trout, catfish, and bass fillets. And, the best part is, your store bought fish won't be belching up soap bubbles in your skillet or on dinner plate because they ate too many soapy earth worms. :0) ROTFL!
How to create an Abundance of Earthworms in your Garden
Earthworms are the workers of the soil and are sometimes called nature's plow. Their job is very important for the quality of soil and also decomposition. Many of ...
+HuwsNursery - Grow Organic Produce Inexpensively that's a good point it might never have gotten uploaded with me wanting to run from the screen :O I'm such a chicken lol
Great vid Huw. I think it is tremendously helpful to find videos like yours
that help people along on their path from novice to experienced gardener.
Thanks and cheers!
Huw, I am absolutely convinced that you mean well, but I find this video
very confused as if you began it by having a point but got lost in how to
make it. Dare I say that you should go back to something local and then
let off the firework of what you have seen in your soil. I have been
following you now for well over a yea4 and I love what you do, but it is
also time for you to place your own marker in the Youtube soil, not just
copy what you can see that works from over there.
Good morning +Aaron's allotment , I appreciate your concerns but here is some good news if you like, when I have more Tuesday Tips they will be a lot more like my older style of videos. For example I will be doing more seed planting videos and talking for most of the video out in the garden showing hands on work. I did want to get myself on the camera for this video however being almost a full time border at my school it is very limited to when I'm in the garden. This spring will see a lot more of me out in the garden and doing stuff it is just difficult at this time of year to do anything so I want to do these type of informational videos for now before the growing season starts again and will continue to do them but balance them out with hands on videos. Thanks for the comment and hope this helped in any way :)
Thanks for sharing, Huw. I am anxious to see how many pounds of castings I
get from my worm farms by Spring. When I add the castings to my garden
beds, my castings always contain some worms. The worms are happy to see
that I have a lot of organic matter on my raised beds. I tell them to
ENJOY your new home and 'chow down and poop'. Thanks for motivating me.
:0)
Thanks for watching +LARK'S GARDENS, I bet that will be very exciting to see:) Yeah that is definitely the way to do it and the plants will thank you for all the great nutrients in the bed by growing that extra bit more. You're very welcome
Very good information Huw. I find if one or two root vetetables are left in
a raised bed, there seems to be more earth worms present than a bed without
earth worms. I haven't compared like with like yet because I only had one
bed of carrots.