예술
뷰티 및 웰니스
공예
문화 및 역사
엔터테인먼트
환경
음식 및 음료
그린 퓨처
역공학
과학
스포츠
기술
웨어러블
Setting Up a Vermicompost Worm Bin — Indoor Composting with Red Wigglers
Karen

작성자

Karen

23. March 2026

Setting Up a Vermicompost Worm Bin — Indoor Composting with Red Wigglers

Set up a vermicomposting bin using red wiggler worms (Eisenia fetida) to convert kitchen scraps into nutrient-rich worm castings (vermicompost). Vermicomposting works indoors at room temperature, processes food waste faster than traditional composting, and produces castings that are one of the most effective soil amendments available, rich in beneficial microbes and plant-available nutrients.

Beginner
1-2 hours (setup), ongoing maintenance

안내

1

Prepare the Bin

Drill 15-20 small holes (5-8mm) in the lid and upper sides of the bin for ventilation — worms need oxygen and the decomposition process is aerobic. Drill 5-8 small drainage holes in the bottom to prevent waterlogging (place the bin on a tray to catch any drips). The bin should be opaque because red wigglers are photosensitive and will burrow away from light. A 50-80 litre bin is suitable for a household producing 2-3 kg of food scraps per week. The bin can be kept indoors (under a kitchen sink, in a closet, or in a garage) because a properly maintained worm bin has no unpleasant odour — it should smell like damp earth.

2

Create the Bedding

Fill the bin two-thirds full with shredded newspaper, cardboard, or a mix of both. This carbon-rich bedding provides the worms with habitat, moisture retention, and a carbon source to balance the nitrogen-rich food scraps. Moisten the bedding until it feels like a wrung-out sponge — damp but not dripping. Add a handful of garden soil or finished compost to introduce beneficial microorganisms that aid decomposition. The bedding should be fluffy and loose, not packed — worms need to move through it freely. Red wigglers live in the top 15-20cm of their habitat, so a wide, shallow bin is better than a tall, narrow one.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Add the Worms

Gently place the red wiggler worms on top of the moistened bedding. Leave the lid off under a light for 15-30 minutes — the light encourages the worms to burrow down into the bedding. Red wigglers (Eisenia fetida) are specifically suited to composting: they live in decomposing organic matter (not mineral soil like earthworms), tolerate crowding, reproduce rapidly, and process food waste equivalent to roughly half their body weight per day. Do not use common earthworms (Lumbricus terrestris) — they are burrowing soil worms that will not survive in a bin. Allow the worms 3-5 days to acclimate to their new habitat before adding food scraps.

4

Feed and Maintain the Bin

Bury food scraps under the bedding (never leave them on the surface, which attracts fruit flies). Suitable foods: fruit and vegetable scraps, coffee grounds, tea bags, crushed eggshells (which provide calcium for worm reproduction), and small amounts of bread or grains. Avoid: meat, dairy, oily foods, citrus in large quantities (too acidic), onions and garlic (worms dislike alliums), and pet waste. Feed approximately 500g of scraps per 500g of worms per week initially, increasing as the population grows. The bin should smell like damp forest floor — if it smells sour or rotten, you are overfeeding or the bin is too wet. Add dry shredded newspaper to absorb excess moisture.

5

Harvest the Worm Castings

After 3-6 months, the bin contents will have transformed from recognizable bedding and food scraps into dark, crumbly worm castings with an earthy smell. To harvest, push all the bin contents to one side and add fresh bedding and food to the empty side. Over 1-2 weeks, the worms migrate toward the fresh food, leaving the finished castings worm-free for harvesting. Alternatively, dump the bin contents onto a flat surface under a bright light and form cone-shaped piles — worms dive to the bottom of each cone to escape the light, allowing you to scrape off the top layer of castings progressively. Worm castings contain 5-10 times more available nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium than typical garden soil, plus a dense population of beneficial soil microbes. Mix castings into potting soil at 10-20% by volume or brew into compost tea.

재료

  • Red wiggler worms (Eisenia fetida) - 500g (~500-1000 worms) piece
  • Shredded newspaper or cardboard (uncoated, non-glossy) - a large bucketful piece
  • Kitchen scraps (fruit/vegetable peels, coffee grounds, tea bags) - ongoing piece
  • Opaque plastic bin with lid (50-80 litres) - 1 piece

필요 도구

  • Drill (for making ventilation holes)플레이스홀더
    보기
  • Spray bottle (for moisture management)플레이스홀더
    보기

CC0 퍼블릭 도메인

이 블루프린트는 CC0로 공개되었습니다. 어떤 목적으로든 자유롭게 복사, 수정, 배포 및 사용할 수 있습니다.

제품 구매를 통해 메이커를 지원하세요. 판매자가 설정한 메이커 커미션 을 받거나, 이 블루프린트의 새로운 반복을 만들어 연결로 포함시킬 수 있습니다.

토론

(0)

로그인 하여 토론에 참여하세요

댓글 로딩 중...