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🌱 Living Soil with Cherene

305 members • Free

11 contributions to 🌱 Living Soil with Cherene
How do you spot an adult red wiggler?
These are red wiggler worms, and here I show the difference between baby, juvenile, and adult worms. All are fantastic eaters and will make worm castings, but adult worms are the once that can make cocoons.
0 likes • 11h
@Cherene Packard my small bin is pretty moist, and I spray the cocoa coir in my vermihut when it seems to be a bit dry, though I have spotted a cocoon in there, too. The small bin is the one with older worms, I tend to move the little ones into the vermihut. I wanted to start a breeder bin but… no one is obviously mature enough! I can post a video this week to get more opinions.
1 like • 4h
I looked into it and it’s possible that I’m fussing with them too often. Apparently, they can fail to lay cocoons if they are handled or their environment is disturbed too often. I am going to try keeping a log so I know when I last fed or aerated. It will be a good experiment, anyway. :)
Bedding Depth?
How deep do you all try to keep your bedding piles? I've read some species prefer being shallow vs deep. My plastic shoebox bin is probably a good 8" deep - is that too deep? Do Red Wigglers prefer surface area over volume? I know @Cherene Packard uses mortar mixing bins that seem to be pretty shallow. What works for you all?
5 likes • 17d
My bedding is about an inch and a half to two inches in my vermihut and maybe three or four inches in my small bin. 8 seems like a lot but maybe that depends on how many worms you have and how quickly you want them to process it.
Look At This!!!
I was looking in on my worms after ignoring them for 3-4 days (I'm getting better at that) and didn't even notice this while checking out my tower and the @Cherene Packard Nursery. Took me a minute to grasp all the color I was seeing in my breeder bin and what it was! Guess there was some active spores left in the substrate! Shot the video and then looked at the other nursery. That's the still photo! What an adventure!
Look At This!!!
1 like • 21d
Wow! Fungus is so wild.
European Nightcrawler Bin Check In
I just reset this European nightcrawler bin, and they seem a lot happier. I’ve noticed that red wigglers are a lot more forgiving when it comes to their bedding being more moist or being fine in their castings, but these European nightcrawlers seem to like extra carbon and for the bedding to be more on the drier side. Not too dry of course! This is just what I’ve observed. It smells earthy, there’s plenty of carbon, the moisture is still like a wrung out sponge, and they are not trying to mass escape. These are a few things to look for when you are doing a check in on your bin!
5 likes • 21d
Dang, those night crawlers are HUGE!!
Request for document
Cherene: I don’t know if this classroom allows for documents to be posted by I would LOVE a written document that walks us through your precompost recipe. The videos are amazing, and I would also love to print a doc that I could easily reference. (The little prepper part of my brain would also like to be able to have a hard copy in case I don’t have access to electricity). I’m about to start my first precompost experiment and it occurred to me that this is basically a recipe.
2 likes • May 23
I’m taking the plunge tonight - finally. I’m nervous as it’s kinda big and messy and it took me forever to save up all the grounds and scraps. But, I figure, the worst that can happen is that I have to toss it in my outdoor bin. 🤷 And I know you say the worms will dig it even if it doesn’t heat and cool properly. But I really hope it works! 🤞🏻
1 like • 25d
@Cherene Packard thanks!!
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Dallas Rising
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@dallas-rising-2855
New worm enthusiast! Eager to learn more about this hobby. In Minneapolis.

Active 33m ago
Joined May 12, 2026