Tags:
I would probably use worms anyway. See even if you don't add them, many people find that worms make their way into the systems on their own (worm cocoons in the roots of transplants or however, worms are amazing creatures.)
Anyway, I would hope you could get local worms that will be more likely to survive your climate. If you let the grow beds drain but say cover them over so they stay moist and a bit insulated for the winter, you might find that it isn't really as big a problem as you think. Granted, I've not had much personal experience in such situations but I know of some people on other forums that have run seasonal grow beds in Pennsylvania and seem to have managed.
Which part of the midwest are you in and what is the greenhouse like? If you can just keep the water from freezing, you might even be able to winter over certain kinds of fish and keep the system minimally ticking over (might not be growing much without extra heating but if you can keep the water from freezing over, the system can be in a sort of hibernation rather than completely shut down.)
I would probably use worms anyway. See even if you don't add them, many people find that worms make their way into the systems on their own (worm cocoons in the roots of transplants or however, worms are amazing creatures.)
Anyway, I would hope you could get local worms that will be more likely to survive your climate. If you let the grow beds drain but say cover them over so they stay moist and a bit insulated for the winter, you might find that it isn't really as big a problem as you think. Granted, I've not had much personal experience in such situations but I know of some people on other forums that have run seasonal grow beds in Pennsylvania and seem to have managed.
Which part of the midwest are you in and what is the greenhouse like? If you can just keep the water from freezing, you might even be able to winter over certain kinds of fish and keep the system minimally ticking over (might not be growing much without extra heating but if you can keep the water from freezing over, the system can be in a sort of hibernation rather than completely shut down.)
you don't necessarily need to keep the greenhouse toasty warm or anything like that. And it doesn't necessarily take that much to keep water from freezing. If you were to throw insulating material over the fish tank and grow beds for the winter, you might only need a small amount of heat (like a stock tank heater as might be used to keep cattle troughs from freezing over in all sorts of climates) set to keep the water from dropping much below 32 F.
I would definitley not advocate you running enough heat to grow tomatoes in January unless that was your passion. Perhaps you could track the temperatures inside your greenhouse this winter to see how much below freezing the inside of the greenhouse usually stays to know if it would be worth the trouble or not.
I know people up in the northern climates who keep worms alive all winter in 4' by 8' beds simply by adding lots of mulch in and covering them with some insulation and a tarp. If that can work, seems to me some insulation or blankets over the grow beds and insulating board over the fish tank and a tarp over it all, perhaps all one would need is a pond de-icer or stock tank heater to keep the system from freezing solid. Since it is inside a greenhouse one wouldn't need to worry too much about wind blowing the tarp off or sucking out the minimal amount of warmth from under the tarp.
but obviously without any heat what so ever, the system will need to shut down over winter if you already have multiple inches of ice over the water in the 300 gallon tank.
I may give your idea a try regarding iowa garden worms, a stock tank heater and insulation. So do I keep the pump running (ebb and flow system) ?
I may give your idea a try regarding iowa garden worms, a stock tank heater and insulation. So do I keep the pump running (ebb and flow system) ?
Hi David,
You have a valid concern about the worms rotting. I've been raising red worms in luggage 'clam shells' for five years in south central Indiana. Most years they over wintered fine with corn meal, wheat straw and foam board insulation. Last year however they all died back leaving it to the hatchlings to comeback in spring for a feebler colony. We aren't sure just what got them, rodent's, cold, fouled bed.
They will go where the food is. I imagine that when you drain the system in fall you could lay decaying vegetables and shredded paper on screens over your grow beds and the worms will inhabit that. You may collect them and overwinter in a basement or tool shed with light bulb. Or you might try super insulating only the grow beds and keep a small heat source in them.
We are overwintering ours this year in an unheated spare room at 40-55 and they are doing great.
They will leave eggs behind in the beds, many of which will survive the freeze. Try not to make any sudden temperature change when you start up again. There are always some rotting worms in a system. I imagine a flushing will help if it stinks. The fresh live worms will take care of the rest when you reintroduce them.
I'll be starting my 256 sq. ft. AP system in spring and i will introduce worms then. I'm building a greenhouse. Hopefully by next winter i will have a Ketchelofen style heater (also called a rocket mass stove) to keep it around 40-50F.
Good luck, let us know how it goes.
Homefire
I may give your idea a try regarding iowa garden worms, a stock tank heater and insulation. So do I keep the pump running (ebb and flow system) ?
© 2024 Created by Sylvia Bernstein. Powered by