Save Yourself Money, Save The Environment - Making A Worm Compost

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Can Making A Worm Compost Really Help The Environment?

YES! Each and every year, households across the world send hundreds or even thousands of pounds of organic waste to city and local garbage dumps. This waste sits out and rots, attracting bacteria and disease. And this is on top of the basic fact that it fills up our garbage dumps leaving an unsightly sore in our city landscapes.

Making a worm compost allows a person to take responsibility for their own waste and take action to reduce their carbon footprint. Instead of sending your waste to the garbage dump, you can put it in a wormery compost in your own backyard, where it will decompose naturally.

There's more? Yes! Nature likes to say thanks for doing your part. On top of saving the environment, making a worm compost provides you with an endless supply of super fertile soil that will help the rest of your yard grow in abundance.

OK Great...But Is A Wormery Compost Expensive?

Not at all! Let's cover exactly what you'll need to get started. You'll need a compost bin, which doesn't have to be anything more than a plastic container from Walmart, some bedding, which you can get for free from your own home or backyard, and of course your wormery worms.

The plastic tub should be about 1 foot tall and 4x4 feet for the lid. You will need to put a few holes in the bottom to allow for the draining of water. The next step to making a worm compost is to add the bedding. The bedding shouldn't be anything special. Grab some old newspaper and shred it up, or get a rake and head outside to get the leaves that have fallen. This is all you need. Be sure that the bedding is most, and add it to your compost bin. Last but not least, add your wormery worms. Wasn't making a worm compost easy?

Make Sure Your Worms Stay Alive

After making a worm compost, the last thing you want is for your worms to die and your compost production to stop. Building a worm compost is easy enough, but there is a lot more that goes into how to find the optimal location for your worms' heal and how often or how much to feed your worms in order to produce the best compost. I had a lot to learn when I got started. If you are interested in making a worm compost and want to know how to keep your worms alive, you can read more about wormery compost at my website http://wormerycompost.com.
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