
Cook Chatty Cathy wrote:
P.S. Jeff I also am adding earthworms to my garden to fertilize and loosen the soil. They can't tolerate chemical fertilizers or bug sprays, so I have to use organic, but it's worth it. I actually dug some up Sunday from shady spots around the yard, I will purchase more. I am using a different method of growing this year....I am covering the ground, similar to how thet grow strawberry fields (with black bisqueen) and I am hoping that will provide shade for the worms (they can not tolerate direct sunlight) also retain moisture for my plants and keep down on weeds. It is all one big experiement, but who knows.......it's fun to try!
You want to know the easiest way to get worms for your garden? Sigh, this brings back memories of childhood.. When we were kids, we would sell night crawlers so me and my brother would have money for summer time fun. Fisherman would buy them every day.
On a rainy night or a night after it has rained all day, go out with a flash light and they are laying all over your yard. Grab them up, easy as that. Try not to hold the light right on them, because they jump back into their holes if you hold it on them too long. The ground has to be wet, so if you are in a bit of a dry spell or just don't feel like waiting for the rain, then hose a section of your yard down right before sunset and you can harvest them right from there. In a matter of minutes, you will have hundreds of them.
If you are going to save the worms for more than a day, put some earth and a bunch of wet leaves in a large container and put somewhere dark (we used to keep ours under the porch). They will live in that just fine as long as you don't put any broken worms in there. Dead worms end up killing other worms for some reason.