Worms of Endearment
Part book tour diary, part earthworm love story

From Amy Stewart, author of
The Earth Moved: On the Remarkable Achievements of Earthworms


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Wednesday, January 07, 2004

Yellow-bellied worms

From time to time I write for Organic Gardening magazine.  The great thing about them is that they are so diligent about fact-checking.  There is no possibility that an error or even a rumor about, say, the benefits of cow manure, or the best way to stake your tomatoes, will slip by them.  When I send an article to them, I have to footnote every fact in the story and attach a photocopy of my source—a reputable book, article, or interview transcript.  I write for a lot of gardening magazines and newspapers, and this is the only publication I’ve ever written for that does this.

So a couple months ago I sent them a story about earthworms, and included a stack of academic sources to back up my assertions. But apparently I wasn’t careful enough—a statement I made about the yellow bellies of red wigglers caught the attention of the fact-checker.  She wrote to me and said, “I didn't see this in the backup or anywhere else. Is it from personal experience? Can you send backup?”

 

Hee hee.  Yes, I suppose you could say I know this from personal experience.  Eisenia fetida, the red wiggler, has a yellowish belly.  It just does.  I have ten thousand or more of them in the composter outside the kitchen door, so I know a thing or two about their bellies.  I ran downstairs with the camera, snapped a picture of an upturned E. fetida, and e-mailed it to OG as proof. 

Here it is, then.  Submitted for your consideration:  the yellow belly of the red wiggler.


11:20:54 AM    comment []



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Last update: 3/18/2004; 6:14:10 PM.
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