Can stinky earthworms be farmed, and how to breed wild earthworms

Updated on Three rural 2024-05-02
4 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    Stinky earthworm farming methods:

    1. Containers: Don't deliberately look for any wooden boxes, pottery pots and other ventilated containers, and don't make holes under the container to allow earthworms to breathe or drain water, which only facilitates the escape of earthworms. Just buy a plastic bucket with a lid, but don't cover it too tightly, especially in summer.

    The method I used was to dig out the middle part of the lid and cover it again, so that the earthworms could breathe and not get out.

    2. Culture medium: It is best not to raise it with ordinary soil, especially not to raise it with mud with more sand, this kind of soil is easy to compact, and the earthworm is getting smaller and smaller. The commonly used medium is dry cow manure (horse or pig manure can also be used).

    After a day of blistering, crush it by hand and use it to raise earthworms. But cow dung is hard to find these days, especially in the cities. You can use straw (or Taiwanese grass cut by green workers, etc.) into a bucket to press, put a little water to let it ferment and rot (about a month) to make a medium, in addition to the usual cleaning paper towels, packaging cartons mashed is also a good medium and feed, if not enough, you can also properly mix some pond mud, but not too much.

    Note a point: dry cow dung often contains a lot of parasite eggs, earthworms will hatch out, and earthworms compete for food and often harm the growth of earthworms, in order to avoid the growth of parasites, you can take advantage of the wife is not at home, put cow dung into a plastic bag in the microwave oven to heat up to kill the eggs, haha, this is a trick, pay attention not to breathe, but absolutely can not use pesticides, the medium is best to change once a year, when changing the first patient earthworm and vermicoon (light yellow translucent such as half a mung bean size thing, Each cocoon can hatch 2-4 earthworms) to choose from, pour out the old medium, replace it with a new medium, pour the earthworm into it, and bury the vermicoon in it.

    3. Feed: In addition to alkaline, salty, spicy, too acidic, and tannin (such as orange peel), earthworms do not eat many things, but it prefers to eat rotten and fermented things, slightly acidic things. Leftovers, porridge, banana peels, etc. are eaten, but according to my experience, the best feed is tofu dregs, that is, bean dregs filtered out of tofu, which is easy to find, cheap, high in protein, and does not smell much after fermentation, and is used to feed earthworms, which are very good.

    However, it should be noted that the tofu residue contains too much water, so it is necessary to squeeze out some water or dry it before putting it into feeding, remove some water, and then bury it in the medium. If you put too much input at one time, a lot of acid will be produced, which will drive the earthworms away.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    Let it decay, and it will be magical.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Raise some chickens and ducks in an earthworm farm.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    1. Breeding site: When breeding wild earthworms, it is necessary to build a breeding pond with red bricks and paint cement to the bottom. 2. Breeding method:

    Put wild earthworms in the soil and sprinkle them with water once a day. 3. Feeding management: feed 3 times a week, you can choose rotten vegetables or offal.

    4. Suitable environment: control the temperature at 18-28 to make earthworms grow rapidly.

    1. Breeding sites

    When breeding wild earthworms, it is necessary to use red bricks to build a feeding pond, and the length of the feeding pond is preferably 2 meters, the width is 1 meter, and the height is meters, and the bottom of the feeding pond should be coated with cement to avoid the earthworm from escaping into the soil, and a partition should be placed in the feeding pond to divide it into a number of small pools.

    2. Breeding method:

    Wild earthworms are suitable for living in humus, when raising wild earthworms, you need to spread a layer of loose and fertile and humus-rich soil in the breeding pond, and then put the earthworms into the soil surface, let them drill into the soil by themselves, and sprinkle water into the soil once a day to keep the soil moist and avoid earthworms from dehydration and death.

    3. Feeding management

    Earthworms are omnivorous organisms, when breeding wild earthworms, they need to be fed 3 times a week, and they can put rotten cabbage, spinach, greens, animal offal, etc. into the soil, and they should be covered with a layer of plastic film on the breeding pond to keep them warm and moisturized, which is conducive to the reproduction and life of earthworms.

    4. Suitable environment

    Earthworms are not cold-tolerant, when breeding wild earthworms, if the ambient temperature is 0-5 degrees, it will enter a dormant state, and if the ambient temperature is lower than 0 degrees, it will lead to the death of earthworms, it is best to control the ambient temperature between 18-28 degrees, which is also the best hatching temperature for earthworm eggs.

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