Gardening Supplies

Worm Composting in the Winter – Feeding, Harvesting and Making Worm Tea



I will be doing worm composting this winter in the garage where my red wrigglers will be nice and warm. In this video I will show you how you can easily set up a vermicomposting bin that will help dispose of some of your kitchen scraps and produce some amazing worm castings for your indoor and outdoor plants. Welcome to the Saskatchewan Prairies, Growing Zone 3 – Canada! On my channel you will learn about cold climate growing techniques, indoor gardening during long cold winters and see what’s cooking in the Little Garden Kitchen!
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2 Comments

  1. Welcome to the Saskatchewan Prairies, Growing Zone 3 – Canada! On my channel you will learn about cold climate growing techniques, indoor gardening during long cold winters and see what's cooking in the Little Garden Kitchen!

    👀DON'T MISS OUT ON ANOTHER VIDEO! SUBSCRIBE HERE: https://bit.ly/2CGyAMX

  2. Wow! You are into all methods and facets of gardening and soil health! I'm impressed. I use the same sifting method for regular compost – just a mesh screen and something to catch the sifted compost. I don't see any need for having to buy any gadget or fancier sifter to do it. I've never tried it but you could probably break up the larger pieces of dried worm castings using a blender or an old coffee grinder. I don't know if it might hurt the integrity of the castings being cut up so quickly though. Maybe there is a reason not to do it that way.

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