The ideal temperature for a worm farm so the worms can breed is 65 to 77 degrees Fahrenheit (18 - 25 degrees Celsius). If you live in a warm climate, place your worm farm in the shade, in the garage or shed, or even inside, as a properly managed worm farm has no smell. On a very hot day you can run cooling water through your worm farm (open the tap at the bottom) and then cover with a wet blanket or tarpaulin.
Worm compost is the absolute best in the world. Worm castings (poo) have all the microbes and bacteria that support the soil.
put them into a animal farm.
normally have a pipe out the bottom of a plastic bin worm farm and just put a bucket underneath spout.
A small worm farm made from a couple of plastic boxes can start with one or two thousand worms. After a few months, if the worms are well fed and at the right temperature, that number will have turned into five or six thousand worms. You can then split the farm in two, or give some away.
They just drink naturally and they use lips to drink water if you have a worm farm.
A mud or A plant.
Not really unless there is a big temperature change! I have a worm farm they don't care. But if there cold and your warm and you pick them up they'll react.
Worms need the right temperature to breed. They need to be kept cool and away from direct sunlight except perhaps in the northern winter. The ideal temperature is 65 to 77 degrees Fahrenheit (18 - 25 degrees Celsius). Keep your worm farm in the shade, in the garage or shed, or even inside, as a properly managed worm farm has no smell. On a very hot day you can run cooling water through your worm farm (open the tap at the bottom) and then cover with a wet blanket or tarpaulin. They need to be not too wet or too dry, but moist. Make sure the worm farm is covered from the rain, and there is good drainage. Some food, such as fruit and other sugary foods can be acid forming, and worms don't like acid. Add a sprinkle of wood ash, garden lime, or dolomite every few weeks to counterbalance the acidity.
Worm farms are beneficial both to the farm owner and to the planet. You make nutritional soil to use and that soil helps the planet by being nutritional.
A $5 worm thing online, and getting your hands dirty in the dirt?
you make a worm farm or a compost bin
If its dry NO If Its Ok then YES!!