You'll also need a box that holds six or seven cubic feet, or about 2 x 3 feet by 12
inches deep. Each pound of worms needs three or four cubic feet of bedding. A better way
to estimate box size is to figure that one cubic foot of worm bin can digest about one
pound of kitchen waste a week without going anaerobic and smelling bad.
Redworms are small and consequently worm growers sell them by the pound. There are
about 1,000 mature breeders to the pound of young redworms. Bait dealers prefer to sell
only the largest sizes or their customers complain. "Red wigglers" from a bait
store may only count 600 to the pound. Worm raisers will sell "pit run" that
costs much less. This is a mix of worms of all sizes and ages. Often the largest sizes
will have already been separated out for sale as fish bait. That's perfectly okay. Since
hatchlings run 150,000 to the pound and mature worms count about 600-700, the population
of a pound of pit run can vary greatly. A reasonable pit run estimate is 2,000 to the
pound.
Actually it doesn't matter what the number is, it is their weight that determines how
much they'll eat. Redworms eat slightly more than their weight in food every day. If that
is so, why did I recommend first starting vermicomposting with two pounds of worms for
every pound of garbage? Because the worms you'll buy will not be used to living in the
kind of bedding you'll give them nor adjusted to the mix of garbage you'll feed them.
Initially there may be some losses. After a few weeks the surviving worms will have
adjusted.
Most people have little tolerance for outright failure. But if they have a record of
successes behind them, minor glitches won't stop them. So it is vital to start with enough
worms. The only time vermicomposting becomes odoriferous is when the worms are fed too
much. If they quickly eat all the food that they are given the system runs remarkably
smoothly and makes no offense. Please keep that in mind since there may well be some
short-lived problems until you learn to gauge their intake.
Setting Up a Worm Box
Redworms need a damp but not soggy environment with a moisture content more or less 75
percent by weight. But bedding material starts out very dry. So weigh the bedding and then
add three times that weight of water. The rule to remember here is "a pint's a pound
the world 'round," or one gallon of water weighs about eight pounds. As a gauge, it
takes 1 to 1-1/2 pounds of dry bedding for each cubic foot of box.
Preparing bedding material can be a messy job The best container is probably an empty
garbage can, though in a pinch it can be done in a kitchen sink or a couple of five gallon
plastic buckets. Cautiously put half the (probably dusty) bedding in the mixing container.
Add about one-half the needed water and mix thoroughly. Then add two handfuls of soil, the
rest of the bedding, and the balance of the water. Continue mixing until all the water has
been absorbed. Then spread the material evenly through your empty worm box. If you've
measured correctly no water should leak out the bottom vent holes and the bedding should
not drip when a handful is squeezed moderately hard.