Find or build a wooden box. Add top soil mixed with worm bedding. Catch a few night crawlers in the evening after watering, or buy a dozen or 2 at a bait shop. Place the worms in your dirt filled box. Add coffee grounds to the mixture once a week. Keep the box in a cool place. Keep the dirt moist. Move the dirt around every 2 or 3 days.
put them into a animal farm.
you make a worm farm or a compost bin
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.
normally have a pipe out the bottom of a plastic bin worm farm and just put a bucket underneath spout.
They just drink naturally and they use lips to drink water if you have a worm farm.
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.
play soda seascontinue till last soda creamenter the mini cave were the last soda cream wasbump into the top corner of the mini caveand there the worm/bait fallsif the bait does not fall you did not bump in well so do it again but make the bump harder!There is no worm in clam water
A mud or A plant.
Worm compost is the absolute best in the world. Worm castings (poo) have all the microbes and bacteria that support the soil.
No, Lucille Ball did not own a worm farm. She was primarily known as an iconic actress, comedian, and producer, best recognized for her role in the television show "I Love Lucy." While she had various business ventures, including her own production company, there is no evidence to suggest she operated a worm farm.
A $5 worm thing online, and getting your hands dirty in the dirt?
If its dry NO If Its Ok then YES!!