Raising composting Earthworms for fun and Profit
Vermicuture 1A
by
Daniel C Merrill MD
Copyright 2011 Daniel C Merrill MD,
All rights reserved.
Published in eBook format by eBookIt.com
ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-0084-6
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without the permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review without prior consent by the author.
The information presented herein represents the view of the author at the date of publication. While every attempt has been made to verify the information in this report to make sure it is accurate, neither the author nor any of his affiliates/partners assume any responsibility for errors, inaccuracies or omissions of any kind. This book is for informational purposes only.
About the Author
Dr Merrill’s families were pioneers of the Seventh Day Adventist Colony in Eel Rock, California in 1933. Eel Rock is located in the center of the redwood empire above the banks of the majestic North Fork of the Eel River, about 20 miles upriver from its’ junction with the South Fork at Dyersville.
Because of the educational limitations of this sparsely populated rural area, the Merrill’s ultimately moved to Myers Flat on the more populous South fork of the Eel River in 1948. Dr Merrill was one of only 72 graduates from the South Fork High school in 1955. He subsequently graduated from the University of California at Berkeley with honor and a degree in Physiology four years later. When Dr Merrill graduated from the University of Southern California Medical School in 1963, he became the first graduate from South Fork High School to become a MD.
After completed his internship and a year of surgical residency in California, Dr Merrill moved to Minnesota where he performed his Urology Residency under the late Don Creevy at the University of Minnesota Health Sciences Center in Minneapolis. After completing his residency, Dr Merrill performed a NIH special fellowship in Urology at the University of Minnesota and subsequently joined the staff of the Urology department at that institution.
In 1973 Dr Merrill was recruited by the University of California at Davis to administer their Urology training program at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Martinez California. Dr Merrill served as Chief of Urology in that institution until its closure in 1991. Dr Merrill and his wife Tina have two daughters. They have lived in the bay area for the past 39 years.
Dr Merrill has a lifelong interest in agriculture related activities having owned and operated large almond, pear and walnut orchards in Northern California. He now grows wine grapes on his property in Contra Costa Counties’ Alhambra Valley and is the sole proprietor of The Mount Diablo Worm Farm.
This is Dr Merrill’s second eBook. The first book, also published by eBookit.com, is titled The Northern California Camper. This 163 page eBook describes in detail 66 of the best campgrounds in Northwestern California. The book is supplemented by 98 colored photographs with greatly enhance the descriptive value of the books written text.
About this eBook
The Mount Diablo Worm Farm and Dr Merrill’s extensive web site www.earthwormsgalore.com were motivated by his belief that something must be done to reduce the adverse effects of human generated waste on our increasingly fragile environment. This eBook is a further extension of this endeavor.
The basis of the this environment challenge revolves around the use of composting earthworms to dispose of the kitchen waste and newspapers that comprise about 50% of the human generated waste that presently ends up in our landfills. The environmental havoc created by the transportation and disposal of our organic waste today is clearly unacceptable. Home composting with earthworms provides one solution to this increasingly serious problem.
In this Ebook the author describes simple and relatively inexpensive, as compared to the present methods of garbage disposal, ways homeowners and apartment dwellers can use composting earthworms to turn their organic waste into valuable organic forms of fertilizer. Not only is home vermiculture the correct thing to do from an ecological standpoint, but it is fun.
For those who want to use worm farming to supplement their living or retirement income, this book will tell them how to do it! There is nothing like experience to make good things happen in any field of endeavor. Dr. Merrill has that experience in home vermiculure and he shares it with you in this eBook.
1. Why Grow Earthworms?
First, because it’s fun!
Besides being incredibly beneficial to mankind, earthworms are very interesting creatures. Once you start raising composting earthworms you may find, as I did, that you cannot resist the urge to check up on them the first thing every morning, just to see how they are doing. Anyone who enjoys gardening and growing things will enjoy this hobby. If, on the other hand, you do not like getting your hands dirty, this might not be the thing for you.
Second, because it is the right thing to do!
Composting with earthworms provides a solution to one of the most pressing problems facing modern man: the disposal of our, newspapers and kitchen waste, in other words our garbage.
At present we pay a huge price economically and environmentally, for the disposal of human generated waste. The local garbage trucks which collect our wastes and the long haul trucks that carry it to the increasingly scarce landfills, contribute greatly to the destruction of our local streets and highways. More importantly, these trucks make a significant contribution to the noxious gases that are polluting the earth’s atmosphere. Once deposited in our landfills our decaying organic wastes continue to produce methane and other atmospheric pollutants for centuries. Even the most well managed garbage disposal landfills will be unfit for housing developments and other similar human endeavors for our life time and the lifetimes of our children and grandchildren.
Commercial Vermiculture, the composting of organic waste with earthworms, already has made a significant positive impact in large farming operations such as dairy farms which employ earthworms to compost the manure produced by their cows. Several municipalities, including most notably San Francisco, have initiated programs wherein the organic waste collected by their waste management trucks is collected in separate containers so that it can be composted locally rather than hauled to distant landfills. This process, of course, is a very labor intensive and expensive. More importantly perhaps, is the fact that the organic wastes to be composted must be collected by the same garbage trucks that are presently ruining our streets and polluting the atmosphere we and all other living creatures’ breath.
Home vermiculture, the composting of kitchen waste and newspapers by home owners and apartment dwellers, provides a relatively simple solution to this increasingly serious problem. It has been estimated that at least 50% of the waste collected by garbage trucks could be composted by earthworms in small inexpensive wormerys designed for home use. This would greatly reduce the need for garbage trucks. Fewer garbage trucks, of course, will result less air pollution and a significant saving in the moneys now required to maintain our streets and highways.
Why not just composite your garbage? Composting in the usual sense is not an option for apartment dwellers who have very limited space. However, there are more important reasons not to compost organic kitchen waste in a