beardofzeus
Well-Known Member
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My garden hose was putting out 8 pH water so now I add phosphoric acid to get the pH around 5.7 - same as my rain water.
Ohana Greenhouse or Koolau Farmers should have it (if you're on Oahu)Thanks guys. Any place in particular you guys recommend?
beardofzeus that is a good idea. I was thinking about making a worm bin.
Dude...why buy worms?...just dig a whole and find some, there are no indigenous worms in Hawaii, most of the worms that are in Hawaii are European worms like you mentioned above, don't pay some dick face $20 an oz for fucking worms when you more than likely have them living in your garden.For worm castings, It's very easy to setup your own worm bin for about $20. You can find people selling the proper worms (red wigglers, or indian blues) on craigslist, and you only need a small initial colony to get things started. I get a full tray of worm juice about every other week and I mix it with some rain water and just bubble it over night with some EWC's, molasses, and bunch of other stuff over night till its nice and foamy.
The worms in Hawaii are composting worms...I have dug up 100's of worm and used them successfully...in a worm bin that i built myself..it fucking takes about 5 minutes to collect $20 worth of worm from my garden, if your comfortable throwing your money away...go head. BTW DS was asking where to get amendments, not make a fucking worm bin!...$20 dollars for a pound of worms? where? try $20 an ounce for worms, $20X16oz= $320 per pound....if you can find them at a better rate ...good for you...but they're free if if you dig them up yourself.I'm not a worm expert, but I have read that the common fat earthworms found in deeper soil are not the preferred type for composting. I had a friend try to use earthworms from his yard in a worm bin and he was unsuccessful. Red Wigglers and Indian blues have a bigger appetite and will eat through your compost quicker. Granted you can find red wigglers and indian blues around your yard as well, you have to know where to look and be able to identify the proper species. They tend to be found more towards the surface in piles of decaying leaves and stuff rather than in deeper soil and are smaller/faster than the common earthworm.
A single $20 investment for a lb of the proper worms is very reasonable considering they will deliver free EWC's for the rest of your life and its far cheaper than the ridiculous prices i've seen on locally made EWC's at Ohana. In urbanized areas like Oahu, i think most would find it difficult to round up enough of the proper species to properly establish a worm bin.
Brah that's a typical response from somebody who just got schooled....i'd be angry too, nobody likes being wrong!...I've been around this tread for quite awhile and i was just setting the record straight, If I'm an asshole for keeping the information on this thread accurate...then your right I'm an asshole....lol...no hard feeling here dudewoah...calm down. No need to rant like a asshole over nothing. Part of DS' question was where to get stuff like castings, I suggested they look into building their own worm bin. That's all.
Right on DelSlow...the best way to catch them is to mix some shredded paper with some compost and leave it in your garden for a few weeks, in time there will be 100's of composting worm just beneath the pile...it doesn't take much, a couple inches of the paper/compost in the area you're trying to harvest the worms, and keep the area fairly moistLOL my first post in a while and I cause drama. Not my intention.
I appreciate the links cooter! And I appreciate everyones input on the subject. I have seen red/blue looking worms while fucking around outside in the dirt so I guess I'll just grab a bunch of those.
Thanks again guys. I think I'm going shopping this weekend