For the non-chemical, organic gardener, compost is an essential part of your hardworking hobby.
Even for those who do use chemicals, adding organic matter back into the soil as broken-down, nutrient-rejuvenated new soil has undeniable benefits – ones you just can’t argue with!
For a quick intro: compost is a natural fertilizer made up of broken down organic materials. When fully decomposed, these provide readily available nutrients for your plants.
The art of composting transforms food scraps, mulch, clippings, leaves, wood ashes, and many other things into a dark, rich soil that you can add to your plants for extra food – or which you use to amend your outdoor beds.
Creating this natural fertilizer using aeration, microbes, turning, and other techniques is one thing. Yet there is another dynamic aspect you can add to the process, and one which is so worth it: the mighty earthworm!
That’s right, earthworms in your compost can be an amazing tool.
Taking care of your own batch, or what is also called a worm farm or vermicompost/vermiculture (vermi– meaning worm), can ramp up your compost, waste stream, and your garden – and you’ve found the perfect article to get you started.
Composting with Worms: Is It Better?
Anyone who’s gardened even a little bit knows that earthworms are fantastic.
But why are they so great, exactly? You see the little pink guys squirming in the soil around your plants from time to time (at least I hope you do…) and it’s a reassuring sight.
But do you have any idea why?
In essence, they eat up organic matter. It passes through their intestinal tract (yes – they poop it out) and the result is fine-textured, nutrient-packed, soil-like castings (yes – another name for poop).
This can actually have the effect of speeding up your pile’s breakdown, if done right.
Dried earthworm castings.
Rather than letting it slowly decompose with just the help of oxygen, microbes, and certain techniques, earthworms mobilize the process of decay – and here’s a couple ways how:
• Consuming Matter
As I said, these little crawlers gobble up matter that may take much longer to break down on its own, catalyzing the composting process. They will literally eat up your food or other waste and excrete it, to complete decomposition faster.
• Tunneling
Worms burrow too, helping aerate and break larger chunks of matter down quicker. This also brings airflow into deeper layers to speed things up, while letting healthier, more beneficial bacteria (aerobic strains) to colonize soil more successfully than unhealthy, anaerobic ones.
• Incredibly Fertile Castings
Not only do these speed up compost – according to the authors of “Teaming With Microbes” (read our review of this fine book), matter that passes through an earthworm’s digestive tract is rendered many times richer and more available to plants than when broken down otherwise.
Teaming with Microbes: The Organic Gardener’s Guide to the Soil Food Web available on Amazon
The result? Perfectly textured, rich fertilizing soil made up of easy-to-use castings – light in weight, but heavy in nutrients.
Aerobic vs. Anaerobic Bacteria?
When composting with a pile or with vermiculture, the goal is to encourage aerobic bacteria over anaerobic types. As the name implies, aerobic bacteria need oxygen and airflow to thrive (thus the need to turn your compost), and they create beneficial nutrients for your plants – while anaerobic strains promote disease, rot, and a terrible stench if aeration is stifled in your pile.
The important thing to realize: earthworms already do all of the above in your garden!
You might even have seen castings around your plants – they look like churned-up bits of soil, some a little like pellets (quite accurate to what they actually are: droppings).
While these dirt buddies are excellent for wriggling through your garden beds – digging tunnels around plant roots to bring in water and nutrients, excreting fertile poop all the while – earthworms in your compost arguably double the benefits for your plants, maybe even more.
Everything they do for your soil, they will also do for your waste stream, scraps, and ultimately, your plants – when you bring them straight to your pile.
I would argue too that it’s essential you see their natural presence in your garden beds, not just your compost. If you don’t see them slithering in the soil of your garden, it’s a sure sign that your soil probably needs some help!
All the same, farming your own will probably have the biggest impact on organic plant feeding out of the two.
If you’re not seeing these little guys in your garden, nourishing your beds with your very own vermicompost can improve your soil makeup, and help attract a population to your garden naturally.
Is Composting with Worms Better?
Everyone has their own way of doing things – but looking at the science of it, many expert gardeners and farmers (of the non-chemical ilk) will insist that it is (and I agree).
Composting aerobically takes a lot of patience and even has a bit of a learning curve.
To make it happen quickly and successfully, you have to masterfully combine the elements of temperature, moisture, nitrogen, and carbon – a lot to get the hang of, though experienced gardeners love it once they do.
Vermicompost, on the other hand, trumps the aerobic method in two big ways: it’s easy to learn and manage, and gives you more nutrient-rich soil in a shorter amount of time!
So, what’s not to love?
Getting Started
Having your own vermicompost will be a bit like having a new pet – or pets, actually.
No need for taking these pets out for walks, grooming, vet checkups, or cleaning up their leavings (especially the latter).
All you need to worry about is feeding your pets enough and correctly, all while letting them do their dirty work (the good kind)!
This method is also fairly easy for folks of all ages to grasp – making it a fun activity for families and kids. It can also help instill lessons and awareness of preserving and working with nature, reducing and reusing food waste, and gardening in a way that’s good for the environment.
If you have managed your own pile in the past: vermicompost is almost exactly the same, except worms do all the turning, aerating, and most of the layering for you.
Are you a newbie to composting? All you need to do is throw scraps into your container – but you can’t just throw everything in.
Only materials that worms can eat and work through are acceptable. Determining which won’t hurt them is an item that we’ll get to later.
1. Finding your Worms
Where to start? First things first – you need to find some earthworm buddies!
It’s true that you can scavenge and snatch up some straight from your garden, but that might be an arduous task for some; and not all wild species will complete the task well for you.
Photo by Adrian White.
You’ll have to take special care that you have the right species for the job, and that you aren’t stealing away too many that are doing your garden some great favors already!
Red wiggler or tiger worms are considered the best and most popular varieties for helping things break down quickly and efficiently, and I’d encourage you start with those.
Uncle Jim’s Worm Farm 500 Count Red Wiggler Live Composting Worms
I’d also highly recommend sourcing them for your little farm from Uncle Jim’s Worm Farm on Amazon – and you can purchase your worms conveniently online, if you’re short of your own garden sources.
2. Container Options
Once you have got your worms, you will need a container, a home for them to live in!
Make your own container:
Stainless steel, galvanized iron, plastic, or ceramic are great – you can choose wood (untreated), though it may absorb some fluids and bring a stink.
Can be as small as 20 inches long, wide, and deep, or as big as three feet long, wide, and deep, though you can go a bit bigger (if you’re feeling confident).
Note: large amounts of waste can be composted from bigger waste streams on bigger properties, though you’ll need LOTS of worms; and keep in mind that breakdown greatly slows, the bigger your pile or system gets.
Container must be able to hold food scraps and other organic material. It should also open at the top, and have a lid to cover it completely closed for protecting your wrigglers.
A good example of what a large vermicompost container may look like.
Have your own compost container already, just without the worms?
You may be able to simply modify it to make it worm-friendly, but make sure that the following details are applied to any vermiculture container you make or choose:
Important Vermicompost Modifications
Drill, hammer, or punch holes in the sides, bottom, and top (lid) of your container for aeration and drainage. At least five to six will do you well. Not only do microbes need to breathe – your little pets do, too.
Note: Don’t worry about holes being big enough for your little guys to escape. If you’re doing things right, they won’t want to leave their box!
Get a tray for the bottom where fluids (called leachates) can drain off and collect (think something like a lid, in which your container can sit snugly).
Too much fluid in your compost is a bane to wrigglers, and draining it off prevents them from drowning – while providing its own natural fertilizing “tea” application in and of itself (which we’ll get to later)!
Buy a Container
Not in the DIY way? At Gardener’s Path we highly recommend the Worm Factory 360 Worm Composter for purchase of a ready-to-go, easy to manage home for your new little farm.
Instead of a simple container, this mini-factory is multi-tiered and made up of several removable trays that your wrigglers will be able to climb up into.
You can then remove trays of finished dark fertilizer easily for garden use, while leaving your squirmy little composters alone to eat in peace in other trays – while adding fresh scraps to them as you go.
Worm Factory 360 Worm Composter available from Amazon
It also features a convenient drain-off spigot you can use to collect what is called leachate, with which you can fertilize your plants by diluting with water when you water them, or use it as a foliar (a nutritional application sprayed onto plant leaves).
At the advice of this article from Nature’s Footprint, always dilute leachate for use on plants at a 1:10 ratio – that is, 10 parts water to every part leachate you use as fertilizer. Pure applications can burn and harm your plants!
Applying diluted leachate to ornamentals.
Further, it is essential that you only apply this to plants you don’t plan to eat, such as shrubs and ornamentals. There are likely many pathogens even in diluted leachate that could be harmful to humans if eaten.
Preparing Your Container
Once you have a container and you’re ready to house your worms, there’s a few steps to follow for getting things prepared – both for making your little guys comfortable, and to support them in becoming compost-making machines.
1. Line the bottom of container with “carbon” matter
That is, in compost terminology, “brown matter” (dried leaves, untreated non-glossy newspaper, untreated shredded paper, wood chips).
Adding carbon material to the worm farm. Photo by Adrian White.
Line your container about a third of the way deep.
2. Add a handful of microbe-active, nutrient-rich soil.
Place at the bottom below the lining, or sprinkle around on top. This will introduce beneficial bacteria and other microbes to the container, which provides food for your wrigglers and helps with breakdown.
Adding a handful of nutrient-rich soil. Photo by Adrian White.
Note that adding sterile or chemically treated potting soil will not achieve this effect, and might actually be detrimental!
Add some good soil from your garden or from already finished compost, for example – or purchase a potting soil that includes active microbes.
3. Spritz lightly with water
A bit of moisture will be very good for their environment – but not too much. Just make sure soil and lining are both lightly damp.
Photo by Adrian White.
Once these steps are complete, you’re ready to release your wriggly friends into your container.
Time to add the worms! Photo by Adrian White.
Simply scoop them into the lining and soil by hand, or open up your purchased container and plop them right in (gently, of course).
How Many Worms Are Needed?
There is no exact formula that has been determined, though you may want to take some stock of how much waste you think you’ll produce on average.
According to Mary Applehof, author of “Worms Eat My Garbage,” available via Amazon, who states that you should employ two pounds of worms for every pound of unfinished compost to start for optimal breakdown.
Keep in mind though – these creepy-crawlers do reproduce quite quickly when they’re happy and thriving, so it’s better to start out with a more reserved amount than way too many.
Make sure to store your farm in a cool, dry place that is protected from the elements, whether inside or outdoors. When it’s warm, somewhere that tends to stay cool all year works well, such as the shade of a garage, shed, or even your basement.
If indoors, keep it away from fans, heaters, or chemicals that could hurt your little guys or dry out their home. If outside, somewhere sheltered and shady works well – the north wall of a building or shed generally suits during hot summer months.
Photo by Adrian White.
When winter’s frigid temperatures come around, you can bring the setup inside, preferably somewhere that gets a good dose of warmth and sun during the day.
Or, keep it outdoors, but switch it this time around to a south-facing side of the house or other shelter. Make sure it still gets cover from snow and other wintry precipitation, with a good amount of sun during the day.
If keeping your pile outdoors during cold seasons too, you can cover it with a tarp or other gardening cover for protection (black is good, to absorb sunlight). Make sure you keep the lid over it, too!
Keep feeding your vermicompost constantly, even throughout the winter – an active pile makes its own heat, which will warm and protect your pets.
Check the temperature too, if you’re concerned: the folks over at Worm Composting HQ say the most productive temperature for red wigglers is between 60 and 80°F, in this article.
Feeding, Care, and Composting
Once you’ve gone through each step above, you should be ready to get composting! Your little friends should be ready, too.
All you have to do:
As you generate kitchen scraps, yard waste, and the like, simply toss it into your container on top of the lining – cover with a bit of carbon or brown matter (i.e. dried leaves, untreated paper, or untreated wood chips), close the container, and wait patiently.
Photo by Adrian White.
Each time you throw on more fresh scraps, make sure to cover them with a lining of carbon/brown matter. This ensures that decomposition happens in tandem with your squirmy little pets, and can also help keep stink down!
What can I feed my worms?
This is a very important aspect of vermicomposting that cannot be forgotten!
Unlike aerobic composting – where you can break down a wide array of organic materials – with your wrigglers, you can obviously only have them process materials that are safe, edible, and degradable by them. What would those be?
Fruit (non-citrus) and vegetable scraps
Soy products (tofu, tempeh, miso, etc.)
Tea bags
Coffee grounds
Egg shells
Nuts and seeds
Untreated paper scraps
Dried leaves
Nutshells
Human hair or pet hair
Laundry lint
Rice, pasta, non-dairy baked goods
Grass clippings
Seedless weeds
What not to feed them
Avoid tossing in the following materials, no matter how badly you want to get rid of them and turn them into plant food.
Most of these wouldn’t be good food for your plants anyway, not to mention that they would be a harm to (or completely untouched by) your pink little guys!
Instead, you’ll have to toss these into the trash – or you can create a completely separate, non-worm aerobic compost pile if you desire.
Citrus or Avocado rinds
Pickled foods/vinegar
Dairy products (yogurt, milk, cheese)
Eggs (even though egg shells are acceptable)
Meat (of any kind!)
Bones (from any animal)
Pet feces
Cat litter
Plastic or other manmade materials
Wood or charcoal ash
Sand
Seedy garden weeds (they’ll sprout back up in your garden if you apply your compost there)
Diseased plants
Cooking oils, fats, or grease (which go rancid before worms eat them, and can encourage anaerobic, bad bacteria)
The End Product: Amazing Compost and a Great Bond
As you feed your worms and get into a groove, you can observe as all your food scraps and waste are turned into beautiful, dark compost.
It depends on what you feed them, as well as the time of year, temperature, and other elements – but on average, you will have some fertilizing compost to work with in about one to two weeks!
Once all food scraps are chowed down on and gone, you can remove all the compost worm castings and place them in a separate container – a bag for soil or a bucket (with a few holes for aeration) are good choices.
Keep your worms in their original container in the meantime, leaving a bit of the soil-like compost still inside for them to still wriggle around and be comfortable in.
Line it with a fresh layer of carbon material like before, throw your scraps in, and watch the magic happen all over again! Lather, rinse, repeat.
Photo credit: Adrian White.
Some aficionados of vermicomposting out there prefer having multiple composting bins for their earthworms – this makes it easier to transfer worms into a new compartment with fresh scraps, all without disturbing them too much while transferring fresh worm castings out (this is why the 360 Worm Farm is perfect)!
If you take the leap and really get into worm farming, the rewards are absolutely worth it, both for your house and your garden.
Not only will you be sourcing your own organic fertilizer for garden plants right at home – you’ll also be forming an invaluable relationship with your earthworms, one of the best fellow gardeners and companions out there in the animal kingdom.
The Worm Book: The Complete Guide to Gardening and Composting with Worms
Want to know more? Check out “The Worm Book: The Complete Guide to Gardening and Composting with Worms,” available via Amazon.
Want to try vermicomposting? Have your own worm farm? Talk to us about it! Comment below, and we’d love to hear from you.
And for more information on improving the soil in your backyard, check out these guides next:
Photos by Adrian White © Ask the Experts, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. See our TOS for more details. Originally published May 16th, 2016. Last updated April 7th, 2023. Product photos via Ten Speed Press, Timber Press, Uncle Jim’s Worm Farm, and the Worm Factory. Uncredited photos: Shutterstock.