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snoopy138
Feb 16, 2011, 9:12 PM
Post #61427 of 105309
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Registered: Jul 7, 2004
Posts: 28992
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camhead wrote: the maths did scare me, but that was really cool. I'm going to have to get that guy's book. teh dirvel could probibly get you a copy of the Science article, also.
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snoopy138
Feb 16, 2011, 9:14 PM
Post #61428 of 105309
(3469 views)
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Registered: Jul 7, 2004
Posts: 28992
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camhead wrote: Arrogant_Bastard wrote: God's an asshole. Jesus fucking christ, I searched the video. Can't watch it. Not even funny to watch it ironically. It's got to be the most illegal thing I've ever seen in preaching! they're hypnotizing brainwashing teh congregation!
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tripperjm
Feb 16, 2011, 9:26 PM
Post #61429 of 105309
(3464 views)
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Registered: Jun 7, 2002
Posts: 10650
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snoopy138 wrote: Arrogant_Bastard wrote: snoopy138 wrote: Arrogant_Bastard wrote: snoopy138 wrote: Arrogant_Bastard wrote: meatbomz wrote: camhead wrote: ok, gonna go set. hope that was sufficiently entertainzing. inkerect durp I saw teh apartmints next to ewe are almost done. my stocking would be much easier if I moved in their. and I'd be close to werk. Well, our upstairs and nextdoor neighbors have both moved out - that could really facilitate the stalkingz. No more broz next door? Yore lucky I hatez moving. Nope, and they took the half dozen bros that were practically living with them when they left. well, there was a very bro-looking character in yore driveway smoking a cigarette this morning. This stalking ov yores, iz starting to luk a little gay.
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carabiner96
Feb 16, 2011, 9:30 PM
Post #61430 of 105309
(3462 views)
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Registered: Apr 10, 2006
Posts: 12610
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camhead wrote: Arrogant_Bastard wrote: God's an asshole. Jesus fucking christ, I searched the video. Can't watch it. Not even funny to watch it ironically. It's got to be the most illegal thing I've ever seen in preaching! I didn't watch the vid, i just thought the 'red people' was an eyeroll
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tripperjm
Feb 16, 2011, 9:40 PM
Post #61431 of 105309
(3453 views)
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Registered: Jun 7, 2002
Posts: 10650
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Arrogant_Bastard wrote: In more important news, I now see what all the fuss is over these ironless shirts. They fucking kick ass. It's almost 5 in the evening and I still look good. Real good. Get off A_B's account sMurf. While I'm sure ironless shirts, much like short hairz on wimin, it's easier. Still, I has to figure, for those ov us luking from teh outside, they both luk gay.
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 9:42 PM
Post #61432 of 105309
(3452 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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carabiner96 wrote: camhead wrote: Arrogant_Bastard wrote: God's an asshole. Jesus fucking christ, I searched the video. Can't watch it. Not even funny to watch it ironically. It's got to be the most illegal thing I've ever seen in preaching! I didn't watch the vid, i just thought the 'red people' was an eyeroll in case ewe didn't see it on teh facespace: http://www.youtube.com/...ed&v=YJWdPn8iFKo
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kachoong
Feb 16, 2011, 9:56 PM
Post #61433 of 105309
(3446 views)
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Registered: Jan 23, 2004
Posts: 15304
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camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway.
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tripperjm
Feb 16, 2011, 9:57 PM
Post #61434 of 105309
(3443 views)
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Registered: Jun 7, 2002
Posts: 10650
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Dun't kotice it untill ewe mentioned it. Still, I has to wonder ifs ewe are won ov those harsh so-cal people with know respect?
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:02 PM
Post #61436 of 105309
(3431 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yeah, I'm hoping the dozens of unbleached coffee filters will serve as sufficient bulk.
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kachoong
Feb 16, 2011, 10:04 PM
Post #61437 of 105309
(3429 views)
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Registered: Jan 23, 2004
Posts: 15304
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camhead wrote: kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yeah, I'm hoping the dozens of unbleached coffee filters will serve as sufficient bulk. Ewe also might want to think abowt pissing on it once a week.
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carabiner96
Feb 16, 2011, 10:06 PM
Post #61438 of 105309
(3425 views)
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Registered: Apr 10, 2006
Posts: 12610
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kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yup, worms don't eat the veggies themselves but the microbes on the veggies that cause them to break down. That's why a balanced worm bin doesn't smell, the worms eat the bacteria before they get a chance to crate smelly by product.
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Arrogant_Bastard
Feb 16, 2011, 10:12 PM
Post #61439 of 105309
(3418 views)
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Registered: Oct 31, 2007
Posts: 19994
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carabiner96 wrote: kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yup, worms don't eat the veggies themselves but the microbes on the veggies that cause them to break down. That's why a balanced worm bin doesn't smell, the worms eat the bacteria before they get a chance to crate smelly by product. I completely forgot about my compost bin. Oops. Poor worms.
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meatbomz
Feb 16, 2011, 10:19 PM
Post #61440 of 105309
(3412 views)
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Registered: Apr 23, 2010
Posts: 7073
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camhead wrote: Arrogant_Bastard wrote: God's an asshole. Jesus fucking christ, I searched the video. Can't watch it. Not even funny to watch it ironically. It's got to be the most illegal thing I've ever seen in preaching! hypmopized by jebus!
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carabiner96
Feb 16, 2011, 10:20 PM
Post #61441 of 105309
(3411 views)
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Registered: Apr 10, 2006
Posts: 12610
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Arrogant_Bastard wrote: carabiner96 wrote: kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yup, worms don't eat the veggies themselves but the microbes on the veggies that cause them to break down. That's why a balanced worm bin doesn't smell, the worms eat the bacteria before they get a chance to crate smelly by product. I completely forgot about my compost bin. Oops. Poor worms. Mine are still in the apartment, they're probably a frozen.
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:22 PM
Post #61442 of 105309
(3409 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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carabiner96 wrote: kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yup, worms don't eat the veggies themselves but the microbes on the veggies that cause them to break down. That's why a balanced worm bin doesn't smell, the worms eat the bacteria before they get a chance to crate smelly by product. hmm. I always thought that there was a bacteria that caused the compost to warm up.
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:23 PM
Post #61443 of 105309
(3409 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yeah, I'm hoping the dozens of unbleached coffee filters will serve as sufficient bulk. Ewe also might want to think abowt pissing on it once a week. just once a week? Shit, I better lay off.
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:24 PM
Post #61444 of 105309
(3405 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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meatbomz wrote: camhead wrote: Arrogant_Bastard wrote: God's an asshole. Jesus fucking christ, I searched the video. Can't watch it. Not even funny to watch it ironically. It's got to be the most illegal thing I've ever seen in preaching! hypmopized by jebus! hypnotosis!
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carabiner96
Feb 16, 2011, 10:26 PM
Post #61445 of 105309
(3400 views)
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Registered: Apr 10, 2006
Posts: 12610
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camhead wrote: carabiner96 wrote: kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yup, worms don't eat the veggies themselves but the microbes on the veggies that cause them to break down. That's why a balanced worm bin doesn't smell, the worms eat the bacteria before they get a chance to crate smelly by product. hmm. I always thought that there was a bacteria that caused the compost to warm up. Bingo. That's why worm composts don't get that hot, if they got as hot as commercial composters, they'd be dead.
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:29 PM
Post #61446 of 105309
(3396 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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aaaAAAHHH!
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:30 PM
Post #61447 of 105309
(3524 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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CHEW!
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:30 PM
Post #61448 of 105309
(3517 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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fertilize the ptftw with some wormy soil
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:30 PM
Post #61449 of 105309
(3571 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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piss on it a bit...
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camhead
Feb 16, 2011, 10:32 PM
Post #61450 of 105309
(3569 views)
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Registered: Sep 10, 2001
Posts: 20939
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carabiner96 wrote: camhead wrote: carabiner96 wrote: kachoong wrote: camhead wrote: [garden tawk!!!] Last couple days have been in the 40s, so I went out to the back patio and turned the compost. It's not been to strong all winter. Wasn't a big enougn pile to sustain any of the good microbes, and it froze clear through (no powering a hottub with this compost pile, dammit). But, there were quite a few earthworms in it, lots of good loamy soil when I turned it over. Managed to dump a huge trashsicle of frozen kitchen waste out of the bin, and bury it, so hopefully it will be good and decomposed by the time planting season rolls around in three months. Also got enough good soil out to put in a planter, and I think I'll start some early season spinach tomorrow. To me this sounds like it's decent compost soil. Worms are usually a gud indicator that ewe have some good microbes working. Give it a bit of time, turn it and if needed work a bit of sand in it to help get the air and moisture throughout. Ewe can also feed the worms newspaper if ewe feel the compost you're putting in isn't enuff for them. Also, no real need to bury the waste ewe put in, except to keep it from further freezing, as the worms will move into any fud source anyway. Yup, worms don't eat the veggies themselves but the microbes on the veggies that cause them to break down. That's why a balanced worm bin doesn't smell, the worms eat the bacteria before they get a chance to crate smelly by product. hmm. I always thought that there was a bacteria that caused the compost to warm up. Bingo. That's why worm composts don't get that hot, if they got as hot as commercial composters, they'd be dead. oh ok. either way, I thin I should go out and gongratulate me worms on the excellent jorb that they have done all winter. their contribution is appreciated.
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