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Catfish says-
"They're welcome to come down the standpipe and bathe in the pond if their little eyes sting! Hee hee hee"
Glad you started this discussion, Sylvia. Some great ideas here for worms as solids filters. Recently, I got very excited about "vermiponics" when I learned about the experiments Jim Joyner was doing. He has a system running that has no fish in it and he shared his experiences on the S&S aquaponics listserv. Bentley Christie wrote an informative blog post about Jim's work here: http://www.redwormcomposting.com/gardening/vermiponics/
My own vermiponics experiment has been running since April and is based on this information, but uses instead a vertical approach, with a succession of buckets filled with clay ball media and plants that are watered with a solar powered pump on a timer. One bucket is full of media and worms. I feed them a pound of kitchen waste, plus a cup of rabbit poop and a handful of shredded newspapers each week. There are a couple of guppies in the 8 gallon water reservoir, which I put in there just to keep mosquito larvae from populating in there. So far, so good - no other fish needed, no fish food, no aeration and no solids filtration needed in this system.
The attached pic shows my current setup. I'll be making a larger one in Denver, Co for an exhibition that opens at the Redline gallery on July 5. More info and pics here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/amymyou/4727997718/in/set-721576242157...
I have just started(1 month or so) a 5 gallon bucket composting system with a small red wiggler culture and already harvested worm tea. This little bin also made me aware of how much trash families do collect. Espically amazed at how much cardboard get used in food production. Needless to say after only a couple days I realized I need a much bigger compost!!
Also, I added six red wiggler worms to my growbed(small growbed) when the bed substrate was mixed sized gravel. I removed the gravel to add hydroton and didn't find the worms. The time between adding the worm and changing substrate was one to two weeks. My thoughts:
1. The system was still too young and the worms had nothing to fed on in the bed and died?
2. They burrowed too deep and drowned?
3. Syphon power sucked them to the lower tank?
4. Possible escape from unfavorable conditions? (I didn't see any signs of this though)
Either way, I do plan to use worms directly into the bed when the culture gets bigger. Just hopefully with better results!
worms may simply have alluded your search and still be in there. As long as the water is well aerated, the worms won't drown in it. I've got worms living in my pump catch basket completely submerged all the time. If worms are drowning in your water, it is a sure sign you need more aeration either by air pump or circulating and splashing the water more.
Worms don't need a huge amount of food to survive but if they died you wouldn't find them since they are so full of all the good decomposing bacteria that they vanish quick unless they crawl out in the sun and turn into crispy worm fries. I've found worms down in the sump and in the pump basket so they can certainly take a ride down the drain, I figure where ever they want to live is fine with me.
Worms are the Aquaponics secret weapon that is for sure.
I actually add food scraps to the grow beds using a worm feeding station in the corner of the grow bed. Works very well.That's great to hear Murray; i was affraid that rotting vegetables on the bed would foul the water.I'm cycling up my new system.Homefire
I have plenty of aeration and the flood and drain cycle is fairly quick. I guess this is like other organic reactions. If you put all the peices together nature does the rest.
TCLynx said:
worms may simply have alluded your search and still be in there. As long as the water is well aerated, the worms won't drown in it. I've got worms living in my pump catch basket completely submerged all the time. If worms are drowning in your water, it is a sure sign you need more aeration either by air pump or circulating and splashing the water more.
Worms don't need a huge amount of food to survive but if they died you wouldn't find them since they are so full of all the good decomposing bacteria that they vanish quick unless they crawl out in the sun and turn into crispy worm fries. I've found worms down in the sump and in the pump basket so they can certainly take a ride down the drain, I figure where ever they want to live is fine with me.
The nutrients in any AP system is added as a component of the fish food. Just because it hasn't been broken down does not mean that you are not adding nutrient to the system.
As food is the only thing added to your system, you are therefore adding your only nutrients when you feed your fish.
TCLynx was correct in saying we only add nutrients when we feed. Worms do not create nutrients out of thin air or water.
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