Most people use some sort of plastic jar, recycled half-gallon yogurt tub, empty waxed
paper milk carton, or similar thing to hold kitchen garbage. Odors develop when anaerobic
decomposition begins. If the holding tub is getting high, don't cover it, feed it to the
worms.
It is neater to add garbage in spots rather than mixing it throughout the bin. When
feeding garbage into the worm bin, lift the cover, pull back the bedding with a three-tine
hand cultivator, and make a hole about the size of your garbage container. Dump the waste
into that hole and cover it with an inch or so of bedding. The whole operation only takes
a few minutes. A few days later the kitchen compost bucket will again be ready. Make and
fill another hole adjacent to the first. Methodically go around the box this way. By the
time you get back to the first spot the garbage will have become unrecognizable, the spot
will seem to contain mostly worm casts and bedding, and will not give off strongly
unpleasant odors when disturbed.
Seasonal Overloads
On festive occasions, holidays, and during canning season it is easy to overload the
digestive capacity of a worm bin. The problem will correct itself without doing anything
but you may not be willing to live with anaerobic odors for a week or two. One simple way
to accelerate the "healing" of an anaerobic box is to fluff it up with your hand
cultivator.
Vegetableatarian households greatly increase the amount of organic waste they generate
during summer. So do people who can or freeze when the garden is "on." One
vermicomposting solution to this seasonal overload is to start up a second,
summertime-only outdoor worm bin in the garage or other shaded location. Appelhof uses an
old, leaky galvanized washtub for this purpose. The tub gets a few inches of fresh bedding
and then is inoculated with a gallon of working vermicompost from the original bin. Extra
garbage goes in all summer. Mary says:
"I have used for a "worm bin annex" an old leaky galvanized washtub,
kept outside near the garage. During canning season the grape pulp, corn cobs, corn husks,
bean cuttings and other fall harvest residues went into the container. It got soggy when
it rained and the worms got huge from all the food and moisture. We brought it inside at
about the time of the first frost. The worms kept working the material until there was no
food left. After six to eight months, the only identifiable remains were a few corn cobs,
squash seeds, tomato skins and some undecomposed corn husks. The rest was an excellent
batch of worm castings and a very few hardy, undernourished worms."
Vacations
Going away from home for a few weeks is not a problem. The worms will simply continue
eating the garbage left in the bin. Eventually their food supply will decline enough that
the population will drop. This will remedy itself as soon as you begin feeding the bin
again. If a month or more is going to pass without adding food or if the house will be
unheated during a winter "sabbatical," you should give your worms to a friend to
care for.
Fruit Flies
Fruit flies can, on occasion, be a very annoying problem if you keep the worm bins in
your house. They will not be present all the time nor in every house at any time but when
they are present they are a nuisance. Fruit flies aren't unsanitary, they don't bite or
seek out people to bother. They seek out over-ripe fruit and fruit pulp. Usually, fruit
flies will hover around the food source that interests them. In high summer we have
accepted having a few share our kitchen along with the enormous spread of ripe and
ripening tomatoes atop the kitchen counter. When we're making fresh "V-7" juice
on demand throughout the day, they tend to congregate over the juicer's discharge pail
that holds a mixture of vegetable pulps. If your worm bin contains these types of
materials, fruit flies may find it attractive.