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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Thursday, March 18, 2004

The Worms Have Landed

The earthworm cocoons I ordered from Gardens Alive arrived today in a cardboard box about the size of a new box of checks.  I opened it up and found this:  one of those small plastic take-out containers that might hold ketchup or soy sauce.  There are fifty Lumbricus rubellus cocoons in here, each coated in (I have learned from reading the directions) a paper coating.

The instructions give you two options:  plant them in the ground like seeds, or hatch them indoors.  Hatching them indoors involves several steps--first they must be soaked overnight, then there are damp paper towels and plastic bags involved, and eventually they hatch and are ready to be released into the soil.

I am curious about the hatch rates of these cocoons, so I want to hatch them in a closed environment, but I want to simulate regular garden soil as much as possible.  So I'll hatch them in a plastic bin filled with organic bagged potting soil.  (I didn't want to use ordinary garden soil because it might already contain worm cocoons.)

More on this enterprise tomorrow...


6:21:11 PM    comment []



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Last update: 4/1/2004; 10:47:18 AM.
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