VERMICULTURE
MANAGEMENT
OF ORGANIC WASTES,
A WORM CHOW-DOWN INITIATIVE FOR
CLASSROOMS
By Trina
Ball…”The Worm Lady”
Why should you
vermicompost as opposed to using traditional organic waste-management methods?
There is a long list of responses to this question depending on whom you
ask. For me it all started when I tired
of trekking through deep snow to a compost pile in the dead of winter. So I bought the recommended species of red
worms, Eisenia fetida (also seen as foetida) and made myself a worm
bin. Through spring and summer, after a
little experience and lots of reading, I accumulated countless other reasons for
adopting my newly-discovered composting alternative. Since one thing typically leads to another,
by fall I found myself providing materials, services and ideas to classrooms in
area schools. Thanks to several
dedicated teachers, many students now use worms and other organisms to break
down organic waste into material rich in nutrients for plant growth in local
gardens.
What goes on in
that little bin connects children to nature and gardening. It’s a model ecosystem and a hands-on tool
for teaching ecology, soil science, biology, entomology, societal concerns,
observation skills, use of the Scientific Method, problem-solving, critical
thinking, accurate record-keeping, measuring, weighing, teamwork, worm
anatomy, mathematics, awareness of avoidable waste, and experimentation
comparing plant growth with and without vermicompost. Please contact me at Balltl@aol.com if you know of teachers
interested in starting a bin, if you
wish to contact teachers who already have one, or if
you wish to be included on my emailing list.
Here
I am in the photo below, in a Suttons
Bay classroom after
school, teaching Kirsten Gerbatsch how to make bins.
I think we made six bins that day before she
told me she was running a low-grade fever!
(Now that’s dedication.) We've been fortunate to have Kirsten as an energetic FoodCorps educator working with
the Michigan Land Use Institute, SEEDS, the MSU Extension; and as a contributor
to this blog. We wish her the best in
her continued work with FoodCorps in Montana !
Kirsten at Work |
Each spring I bring some of the
classroom bins and vermicompost home for summertime care, to be returned the
following fall. The photo below shows this fall’s preparations for “Worm Lady
Deliveries.” That wonderful tote bag was
a generous gift from good friend, Master Gardener and animal rehabilitator,
Lillian Mahaney.
For those of you who do not know Trina..she is incredible and very knowledgeable about vermiculture. The children love learning about the worms and watching them digest the waste.
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