Locating the Worms
The species of worm used for vermicomposting has a number of common names: red worms,
red wigglers, manure worms, or brandling worms. Redworms are healthy and active as long as
they are kept above freezing and below 85 degree. Even if the air temperature gets above
85 degree, their moist bedding will be cooled by evaporation as long as air circulation is
adequate. They are most active and will consume the most waste between 55-77 degree--room
temperatures. Redworms need to live in a moist environment but must breath air through
their skin. Keeping their bedding damp is rarely the problem; preventing it from becoming
waterlogged and airless can be a difficulty.
In the South or along the Pacific coast where things never freeze solid, worms may be
kept outside in a shallow shaded pit (as long as the spot does not become flooded) or in a
box in the garage or patio. In the North, worms are kept in a container that may be
located anywhere with good ventilation and temperatures that stay above freezing but do
not get too hot. Good spots for a worm box are under the kitchen sink, in the utility
room, or in the basement. The kitchen, being the source of the worm's food, is the most
convenient, except for the danger of temporary odors.
If you have one, a basement may be the best location because it is out of the way.
While you are learning to manage your worms there may be occasional short-term odor
problems or fruit flies; these won't be nearly as objectionable if the box is below the
house. Then too, a vermicomposter can only exist in a complex ecology of soil animals. A
few of these may exit the box and be harmlessly found about the kitchen. Ultra-fastidious
housekeepers may find this objectionable. Basements also tend to maintain a cooler
temperature in summer. However, it is less convenient to take the compost bucket down to
the basement every few days.
Containers
Redworms need to breathe oxygen, but in deep containers bedding can pack down and
become airless, temporarily preventing the worms from eating the bottom material. This
might not be so serious because you will stir up the box from time to time when adding new
food. But anaerobic decomposition smells bad. If aerobic conditions are maintained, the
odor from a worm box is very slight and not particularly objectionable. I notice the box's
odor only when I am adding new garbage and get my nose up close while stirring the
material. A shallow box will be better aerated because it exposes much more surface area.
Worm bins should be from eight to twelve inches deep.
I constructed my own box out of some old plywood. A top is not needed because the worms
will not crawl out. In fact, when worm composting is done outdoors in shallow pits, few
redworms exit the bottom by entering the soil because there is little there for them to
eat. Because air flow is vital, numerous holes between 1/4 and 1/2 inch in diameter should
be made in the bottom and the box must then have small legs or cleats about 1/2 to 3/4 of
an inch thick to hold it up enough to let air flow beneath. Having a drip-catcher--a large
cookie tray works well--is essential. Worms can also be kept in plastic containers (like
dish pans) with holes punched in the bottom. As this book is being written, one mail-order
garden supply company even sells a tidy-looking 19" by 24" by about 12"
deep green plastic vermicomposting bin with drip pan, lid, and an initial supply of worms
and bedding. If worm composting becomes more popular, others will follow suit.