Vermicomposting How worms can reduce our waste Matthew Ross

Think of all the food made
in the world each year.

Hard to picture?

Then, imagine that you
are all of humanity,

and on a plate in front of you

is the one lovely annual
meal you make for yourself.

You did all sorts of work putting
that meal on your table.

You must be eager to consume
the fruits of your labor.

And the vegetables

and meats

and waffles of your labor, too, right?

Well, oddly enough, a third of that meal

ends up in the trash.

A third of the food we eat globally,

an estimated 1.3 billion tons

ends up as waste.

All the work we put into producing
that food is wasted.

And what’s worse, it costs us.

America alone spends an estimated

165 billion dollars a year

managing food waste.

We’re wasting food,

energy,

and money.

Perhaps worst of all,

we’re wasting the chance to change,

to make the system of food
consumption more efficient.

If you want to bring on that change,

you should know about a humble

yet diligent and ever-so-crucial ally:

the worm.

Worms convert organic waste

and other compostable products
into natural fertilizers.

Up to 75% of what we put
in the waste stream

can become food and bedding material

for vermicomposting.

You can create a worm bin in your own home

to see the composting process in action.

First off, you need worms

and not your typical earthworms.

You need redworms,

eisenia foetida,

the species responsible for most

vermicomposting in North America.

These red wigglers are surface dwellers

who don’t burrow too deep,

they’re optimal feeders
around room temperature,

and they’re well-suited
to converting organic waste

into usable fertilizer.

Now, your worms might be vermin,

but they need a comfortable
space to live and work:

some bedding materials,

either shredded paper or cardboard,

some moisture,

and, of course, food,

mainly, your leftovers,

slightly decomposed table scraps.

The worms break down food waste

and other organic matter into castings,

a fancy synonym for worm poop.

Their excrement is absolutely
teeming with microbes,

which continue the decomposition process,

making all those once-wasted nutrients

available again as fertilizer.

The timeline for the whole process varies

depending on the quantity of worms,

the temperature,

and how much waste is added to the bin.

And there’s another timeline to consider.

In a healthy worm-bin habitat,

worm reproduction will occur

when the wigglers become sexually mature,

indicated by an elongation of the segments

into a bulbous structure.

Three-month old wigglers can produce

two to three semi-translucent
yellow worm cocoons a week.

You thought only moths and butterflies

come out of cocoons?

Well, we can’t all be majestic.

It takes around 11 weeks
for new babies to hatch.

When your bin seems to be full
of living vermicelli noodles,

it’s time to share
the bounty with your friends

and start a vermicompost club.

Or keep those worms to yourself

and start a business.

Vermicomposting isn’t confined

only to small worm bins,

it’s an emerging
entrepreneurial enterprise.

Large-scale facilities convert

bulk organic waste and even manure

into rich, black castings
called black gold.

Its value as a soil
additive is unparalleled,

and it can help plants
resist harmful pathogens.

The lack of available land
in urban environments,

coupled with growing interest
in smaller-scale farming

means there is a market
for vermicomposting.

Many communities use composting

as part of zero-waste strategies,

and they can sell
their worm-eaten table scraps

to local farms, hungry
for rich fertilizer.

So, instead of wasting money,

dumping wasted food in landfills,

we can remake waste into an asset,

putting it back into our food system

to make it more sustainable,

all with the help of the humble worm,

the tiny organism that can help us

change the way we look
at food’s place in our lives

and our place in the world,

as long as we give the little guy

a place at our table.

Well, not an actual seat at the table.

A bin in the shed is fine.