Okay. So I have a worm bin. I filled it full of about 3 pounds of beans recently. The worms, they didn't like that so much. They've migrated away in the bin.
I have the trash can compost bin, full of grass clippings and a few trimmings from my tomato plant and a few leaves I've picked up. And a lot of water too. But hey, it's shrinking. I need to find an icepick...
Anyway, boss got some flowers for his anniversary the other day, and they've wilted and he is now ready to dispose of them.
Should I put them in the worm bin, or my compost out in the back yard?
Okay so, what kind of beans were they? How big is your worm bin?
What kind of worms do you have?
If you don't have air circulation in your compost bin, you'll get anaerobic activity that makes the decomposting materials bad instead of good for your plants. Bet it's kinda stinky?
Put the flowers on your compost pile. The worms need their environment dried out, I'll bet.
Joined: Mon Mar 15, 2004 11:48 pm Posts: 34 Location: California, San Joaquin Valley - home of 105* summers, foggy winters.
You know, just ranch style beans. A friend's brother gave him a 5 pound can for his birthday. Long story.
A few things come to mind:
The beans might be salty. Worms don't like salty stuff. Or too spicy. Hot peppers and chili will burn the worms, so they make an exit while they wait for that stuff to breakdown or be diluted by other things.
Also, there is likely way more beans than the worms can clean up in a reasonable amount of time, so things fermented and went sour, causing an acid environment, unlivable conditions for worms.
1. Add some more of whatever you are using for bedding, peat/sphagnum moss, dirt, coffee grounds or ground coconut shells, damp, please.
2. Turn the stuff in the bin with the added bedding to expose to air. Do this every day until the smell changes from bad/sharp/acid to "fresh turned earth" smell. Add your worms again, but this time, add less food until your worm population catches up.
3. And the next time, you plan to dump a whole bunch of something in that your worm population can't keep up with, be sure to turn the bin every 2 days for a week or so, to get the air and microbes to help with the burden of breaking all that stuff down.
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