![]() Here’s your 5-step plan for creating the ultimate breeding conditions for your red wigglers: Step #1: Watch The Temperature Good to know: For every pound of kitchen scraps you make a day, you’ll need 2 pounds of worms. And just like that, you’ll have enough worms to eat through your organic kitchen waste! The more comfortable you make life for your wigglers, the more they’ll breed and the faster new baby worms will hatch (so they can grow up and boost the breeding team). How Do You Encourage Red Wiggler Worms To Breed? Still, it takes 2 worms to make a cocoon. ![]() What makes this possible is that one worm has both male and female reproductive organs. As long as they have everything they need to be healthy and happy, they’ll keep pushing out cocoons!Īll wigglers produce cocoons. When life is good for red wigglers, each adult worm can produce 2 to 4 cocoons a week. Learn more about red wigglers’ life cycle. Up to 5 worms emerge from each cocoon – so a single worm can make 500 worms in a year! A month or 2 later, these new worms get in on the reproduction action.Įach adult red wiggler produces around 100 cocoons a year. After at least 3 weeks (or several months under bad conditions), 2 to 5 baby worms pop out of each cocoon. They find mates and make cocoons containing up to 20 eggs. Wigglers start reproducing when they’re about 30 to 60 days old. Take good care of your red wigglers, and your collection of wriggly friends will grow before your eyes! Ideal conditions include a moist environment, a temperature range of 60 to 80☏, neutral pH, and plenty of food. Records show 8 worms can reproduce into 1 500 in 6 months. However, when conditions are right, these worms can multiply faster. ![]() ![]() Red wiggler populations typically double every 3 to 6 months. Keep scrolling to discover how quickly red wigglers reproduce and how to help them breed faster. Perhaps you bought your first squirm of worms, hoping to make them multiply, and now you’re wondering how long you’ll need to wait for your worm community to grow. Red wigglers are composting dynamos – they gobble up at least half their weight in organic waste daily! But they’re lightweights (1 000 worms weigh only about a pound), so you’ll need lots of worms to make a dent in your bucketful of fruit and veggie scraps.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |