the compost pile is not be a good way to cultivate to when you have a large plot a little desert ... if you can not water all the ground wet enough compost pile can be maintained to paradise to ... and when the weather permetra it will occupy the rest of the field and we will help them get around by moving the compost
home I do not have that problem ... I do not cultivated anything and everything grows ... the soil is alive and worms are abundant ... the turicules are enormous
Earthworms ... it is how?
- chatelot16
- Econologue expert
- posts: 6960
- Registration: 11/11/07, 17:33
- Location: Angouleme
- x 264
Re: Earthworms it comes ... how?
No. It does not work.
These are not the "good" worms. Under the compost heap, there are "épigés", a kind of big lazy people who gulp down organic matter, copulate like twisted ones, multiply massively ... This is why very quickly, there are many. But to help the gardener, they are "wankers" ...
Conversely, anecics are deep, dig vertical galleries, take out their heads at night, drag a bit of hay or leaf, which they macerate in depth before swallowing it with soil, bacteria ... They multiply very slowly. But their role in the "turbomixing" of soils is essential ...
These are not the "good" worms. Under the compost heap, there are "épigés", a kind of big lazy people who gulp down organic matter, copulate like twisted ones, multiply massively ... This is why very quickly, there are many. But to help the gardener, they are "wankers" ...
Conversely, anecics are deep, dig vertical galleries, take out their heads at night, drag a bit of hay or leaf, which they macerate in depth before swallowing it with soil, bacteria ... They multiply very slowly. But their role in the "turbomixing" of soils is essential ...
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Re: Earthworms it comes ... how?
chatelot16 wrote: the soil is alive and worms are abundant ... the turicules are enormous
So these are the good ones! The anecics. You are a happy "worm breeder"! "They are the ones who garden for you. As long as you do not harm them! Touch nothing, bring hay to feed them continuously, protect their work (the well-structured soil, the galleries) and control weeds, plants and you will pick up with a shovel!
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- chatelot16
- Econologue expert
- posts: 6960
- Registration: 11/11/07, 17:33
- Location: Angouleme
- x 264
Re: Earthworms it comes ... how?
these are complicated to ... when we want to promote with a compost heap we have to good for nothing ... when one cultivates nothing, if not the ortieculture was an abundance .. .
if someone close to me needs to while I'm building a building, so that the floor surface will be lost, it is quite possible to carry the good land full of worms
if someone close to me needs to while I'm building a building, so that the floor surface will be lost, it is quite possible to carry the good land full of worms
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- Grand Econologue
- posts: 1111
- Registration: 10/10/13, 16:30
- Location: Geneva countryside
- x 189
Re: Earthworms it comes ... how?
Hello,
I think we should be wary of potential invaders before moving earth over long distances.
As these killers to earthworms!
gardening / plathelminthe-land-a-new-invader-t12453.html
This article has already 3 years, that became these flatworms?
I think we should be wary of potential invaders before moving earth over long distances.
As these killers to earthworms!
gardening / plathelminthe-land-a-new-invader-t12453.html
This article has already 3 years, that became these flatworms?
0 x
Re: Earthworms it comes ... how?
Flatworms are quite another family!
Once, indeed, large anecic lunch no longer exist in the north. It would be tempting ... but without doubt playing the sorcerer's apprentices!
On the other hand, when in a subdivision, a ground has been so denatured that the anecics have not succeeded in reclaiming it, it would be "reasonable" to look into their introduction (from the neighborhood).
Once, indeed, large anecic lunch no longer exist in the north. It would be tempting ... but without doubt playing the sorcerer's apprentices!
On the other hand, when in a subdivision, a ground has been so denatured that the anecics have not succeeded in reclaiming it, it would be "reasonable" to look into their introduction (from the neighborhood).
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Re: Earthworms it comes ... how?
dede2002 wrote:
As these killers to earthworms!
gardening / plathelminthe-land-a-new-invader-t12453.html
This article has already 3 years, that became these flatworms?
I found that ; maps updated in 2015
https://sites.google.com/site/jljjustin ... -miseajour
Please note, this card incorporates the 6 types of flatworms, not just invasive he issue there.
The detail is here:
https://sites.google.com/site/jljjustin ... sif/cartes
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- Grelinette
- Econologue expert
- posts: 2007
- Registration: 27/08/08, 15:42
- Location: Provence
- x 272
Re: Earthworms it comes ... how?
Did67 wrote:Under the compost heap, there are "épigés", a kind of big lazy people who gobble up organic matter, copulate like twisted ones, multiply massively ... This is why very quickly, there are a lot of them. But to help the gardener, they are "wankers" ...
It's been years that I have a big wooden box in the garden for composting organic waste, and when I moved my compost to cover the fresh waste, it was mostly a small white multitudes to very thick (about 1 cm in diameter and about 2 cm long) and very large grubs (in 1 cm in diameter by 7 cm long), but very few earthworms.
That said, the compost seemed pretty good: dark, light soil and fine as I emptied into the garden or vegetable garden.
One day a friend brought me a box containing small earthworms (supposedly specific for composting) he had taken from his compost and I put them in my compost. Since there are more big white worms in my compost but thousands of small earthworms for about 10 cm long. There's so much that when I stir the compost I feel stirring a huge plate of spaghetti.
I wonder if this new compost is different from the old, but the work of these small red worms is very efficient and very fast regarding reducing the volume of waste composted.
0 x
Project of the horse-drawn-hybrid - The project econology
"The search for progress does not exclude the love of tradition"
"The search for progress does not exclude the love of tradition"
Re: Earthworms it comes ... how?
Large white grubs looks like worms stag beetle, they eat mainly wood.
I've already found in flower beds where they had put the cheap potting soil.
I've already found in flower beds where they had put the cheap potting soil.
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