Checkout this great article from Mother Earth News about Winter worm composting:
Even in the heat of summer, it's not to early to consider ways to
keep our garden friends, our composting worms, fully employed over the
winter months.
For now, use that vermicompost for some worm "compost teas" to help
your gardens with the stress of this summer’s heat. When cold weather
comes, gather your materials and try overwintering your worms outside.
Cold weather (remember that?) will definitely slow the activity
of a worm colony. Although my experience is that worms can be
incredibly hardy, there’s no reason to miss a beat over the winter. The
two key factors are shelter and heat.
Last winter I chose had to replace my compost bins cause they
were rotten. They were oak pallets and they had lasted about seven
years. I took the old pallets out, but wanted to level the site, so I
started digging. What I found was a very rich layer of vermicompost
between and under the pallets. Remember, I’ve been filling my bins with
worms and managing for their happiness for the whole seven years.
I ended up with a level site and nine wheelbarrows full of
vermicompost! As I shoveled the black gold aside, I tried to put the
material with the most worms farthest from the compost bin pad. I spread
the vermicompost on my garden and mulched it for the winter.
What was left over was perhaps three wheelbarrows of finished
vermicompost and most of my worms. I covered the pile with some clear
plastic greenhouse glazing. I never stopped putting my household food
scraps on the south side of the pile. I simply came outside, lifted the
plastic and a layer of straw and threw the scraps into the pile. What
happened was that I started an active composting pile. There was enough
food coming in, getting mixed in and covered to get hot and keep the
whole area well above freezing. The winter sun helped warm the pile
through the clear plastic. On cold nights there was condensed moisture
on the inside of the plastic but the pile was plenty warm enough to keep
going.
The worms were hanging out at the edges of the pile, staying
warm and well fed. Although last winter was mild, this strategy will
work well as far north as Minnesota, as I found out on a tour of compost
education programs to St. Cloud in 1993. I visited Compost Guru, Jim McNelly
(founding board member of the U.S. Composting Council) as he brought me
in to educate in the schools there. He had a busy worm colony in a
small black plastic compost unit outside his house in a tough winter.
Cool article, huh? What are your experiences with our friendly creepy crawler?
Top photo: On the left is the windrow full of vermicompost
that I harvested from the dark flat area on the right. Notice the clear
plastic covering the pile, the pallets that will become the next bin and
the stored bags of leaves.
Lower photo: The worms are hard at work under the clear
plastic and the straw layer. The 2 x 4's are not a part of the system,
just left overs from the compost bin being built in the background.
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