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18 Responses to Swag Industries: The Swag Worm Farm
This lady hasn’t got a clue.
lifealteringevent
November 11, 2011 at 3:49 pm Reply
@shelmarie87 Brown carton without ink helps a lot to preserve them through high and low temps. The live in the carton. Please don´t forget to humedify it.
Simple to release? So, why did she not show us how simple?? To suggest that we use cat shit should be a crime. I think this lying bitch should eat some shit!
Don’t know why this is spam any more than anything else on YouTube. I’ve seen all kinds of products for sale and I appreciate the opportunity to discover what’s available out there in my areas of interest. If you don’t like the subject material, don’t bloody click on it! What a wanker…
They like temperatures around 70s and humid environments. I read they become slow below 50 and they die at 33 F. I’d put them inside my garage and put a heavy quilt over, or inside a kitchen cabinet.
I created a place in the ground about 2 feet deep with weed mesh at the bottom.
It’s dipping down to -9 tonight. I am wondering if they will survive. Guess I will find out this summer
FreeGlobalEnergy
November 11, 2011 at 7:54 pm Reply
Continued……..
As the Swag is twice the capacity of the tray systems, it’s much less likely that your worms will suffer, though they DO slow down when they are colder.
You can remedy that by feeding them things that ‘warm up’ like fresh grass clippings, (if you can get them in winter!), fresh animal manures, and stuff like chicken mash heats when compacted and dampened. It gives them a little heat cover.
Keep the Swag full, so the worms are in maximum bedding.
Cheers
Hey FGE, I presume you must be talking fahrenheit! As I’m an Australian worm farmer, I’m more used to seeing people cook their worms in the smaller plastic tray systems, but yes, of course measures need to be taken to protect any live stock form extreme temperatures.
If you’re getting minus zero temps, then you should have your worm farm in a garage, shed or in a protected basement.
To be continued……..
If the temparature drops to 25 degrees in the winter I wonder if the worms would freeze to death in that thing
FreeGlobalEnergy
November 11, 2011 at 10:17 pm Reply
Hey reaper, I have used those old tray ones as well as the Swag, and can tell you the Swag is WAY better. It holds heaps more, and I don’t keep losing my worms down in the bottom trays, or drowning them.
The manufacture and material is really good quality, and mine’s been going for about 4 or 5 years so far.
I’ve been into vermiculture for a long time, and this is the best one I’ve found for domestic use.
A lot of the cost of building these is in the labour. The sewing involved is actually pretty complex.
That’s something we like about it. It means less of the money goes to oil companies for manufacturing plastic and more of the money goes to giving people jobs.
good on ya just seems like a lot of money for a swag that doesnt look that complicated to build im using a 3 piece tray worm farm thats fine for me but this swag really interests me 😀
Brilliant. My mum has one in Scotland and says even in the cold there it’s going well. I have just bought some for presents so my friends can all make their own fertiliser and grow veggies and stuff.
This lady hasn’t got a clue.
lifealteringevent
November 11, 2011 at 3:49 pm
@shelmarie87 Brown carton without ink helps a lot to preserve them through high and low temps. The live in the carton. Please don´t forget to humedify it.
sinsarcasmo
November 11, 2011 at 4:16 pm
@sinsarcasmo Yup and they tolerate heat even less. Anything higher than 75*F can severely stress them out.
shelmarie87
November 11, 2011 at 4:20 pm
Simple to release? So, why did she not show us how simple?? To suggest that we use cat shit should be a crime. I think this lying bitch should eat some shit!
Skaggydog
November 11, 2011 at 4:33 pm
Don’t know why this is spam any more than anything else on YouTube. I’ve seen all kinds of products for sale and I appreciate the opportunity to discover what’s available out there in my areas of interest. If you don’t like the subject material, don’t bloody click on it! What a wanker…
nopot2peen
November 11, 2011 at 4:34 pm
Dog waste is dangerous, to children, if used in a vegetable garden.
MrSirJet
November 11, 2011 at 5:06 pm
Dog waste is dangerous, to children, if used in a vegetable garden.
MrSirJet
November 11, 2011 at 5:54 pm
Dog waste is dangerous, to children, if used in a vegetable garden.
MrSirJet
November 11, 2011 at 6:38 pm
Good luck.
They like temperatures around 70s and humid environments. I read they become slow below 50 and they die at 33 F. I’d put them inside my garage and put a heavy quilt over, or inside a kitchen cabinet.
Good luck.
sinsarcasmo
November 11, 2011 at 7:05 pm
I created a place in the ground about 2 feet deep with weed mesh at the bottom.
It’s dipping down to -9 tonight. I am wondering if they will survive. Guess I will find out this summer
FreeGlobalEnergy
November 11, 2011 at 7:54 pm
YES!
Below 33 F worms are toast.
sinsarcasmo
November 11, 2011 at 8:45 pm
Continued……..
As the Swag is twice the capacity of the tray systems, it’s much less likely that your worms will suffer, though they DO slow down when they are colder.
You can remedy that by feeding them things that ‘warm up’ like fresh grass clippings, (if you can get them in winter!), fresh animal manures, and stuff like chicken mash heats when compacted and dampened. It gives them a little heat cover.
Keep the Swag full, so the worms are in maximum bedding.
Cheers
Vermibabe
November 11, 2011 at 9:26 pm
Hey FGE, I presume you must be talking fahrenheit! As I’m an Australian worm farmer, I’m more used to seeing people cook their worms in the smaller plastic tray systems, but yes, of course measures need to be taken to protect any live stock form extreme temperatures.
If you’re getting minus zero temps, then you should have your worm farm in a garage, shed or in a protected basement.
To be continued……..
Vermibabe
November 11, 2011 at 9:33 pm
If the temparature drops to 25 degrees in the winter I wonder if the worms would freeze to death in that thing
FreeGlobalEnergy
November 11, 2011 at 10:17 pm
Hey reaper, I have used those old tray ones as well as the Swag, and can tell you the Swag is WAY better. It holds heaps more, and I don’t keep losing my worms down in the bottom trays, or drowning them.
The manufacture and material is really good quality, and mine’s been going for about 4 or 5 years so far.
I’ve been into vermiculture for a long time, and this is the best one I’ve found for domestic use.
Vermibabe
November 11, 2011 at 10:28 pm
A lot of the cost of building these is in the labour. The sewing involved is actually pretty complex.
That’s something we like about it. It means less of the money goes to oil companies for manufacturing plastic and more of the money goes to giving people jobs.
diyecolife
November 11, 2011 at 10:56 pm
good on ya just seems like a lot of money for a swag that doesnt look that complicated to build im using a 3 piece tray worm farm thats fine for me but this swag really interests me 😀
Reaper139139
November 11, 2011 at 11:32 pm
Brilliant. My mum has one in Scotland and says even in the cold there it’s going well. I have just bought some for presents so my friends can all make their own fertiliser and grow veggies and stuff.
Mingmick
November 11, 2011 at 11:57 pm