Worm are a great benefit to all soil, aerating and increasing fertility. In fact, in the past land was valued by the number of worms to be found in the soil.
The process of using worms to compost organic wastes is called vermicomposting or vermiculture. Worms eat through leaves, grass clippings, manure, and almost any non-woody vegetative waste much faster than nature can break it down alone. They cannot consume animal meat or fat.
Worms leave castings behind them, a perfectly balanced fertilizer that can be added directly to the soil or added to water with the other runoff from the worm farm and sprayed on as a liquid fertilizer. This liquid fertilizer can be used as a perfectly balanced hydroponic solution (see chapter on intensive recirculating aquaculture).
Red wiggler worms are used for vermiculture and can be purchased from your local garden center or found in your garden. They must be composting worms not soil worms.
Black soldier fly larvae are one of the fastest nutrient recovery mechanisms available to the small homesteader.
BSF larvae are used in composting and as food for animals. As larvae, they consume up to ten times their body weight in organic waste per day—many times more than worms can. The wastes they consume include fresh manure and nearly any non-woody organic wastes.
They can turn 100 lbs. of kitchen or garden wastes into 20 lbs. of high-grade protein and lipid animal or fish feed in a matter of days. They can even eat meat wastes, which worms cannot do.
Houseflies and blowflies cannot lay eggs in the material inhabited by black soldier fly larvae. BSFs are not a vector for disease, and adult flies have no mouthparts, meaning they cannot bite you. They are not attracted to human habitation or foods; the egg-bearing females are only attracted to rotting food or manure.
Plus, mature larvae are self-harvesting; when ready they will crawl out of the compost pile and fall onto the ground (or into your feed bucket) for easy harvesting and feed to animals. BSF larvae are over 40% protein and nearly 35% fat (dry matter weight), with nearly 5% calcium with many other trace nutrients—a powerhouse of nutrition.
And the residue left after digestion can be fed to the worms in your worm farm or used directly as a soil amendment in the garden.
However, being a tropical and subtropical insect, they require warmth. Larvae will go dormant below 50°F and above 110°F. If you live in a cold area, you may have to grow them indoors during winter. (Worms don’t have this issue.)
The Structure:
Operating A BSF Digester: