Guest guest Posted May 25, 2010 Report Share Posted May 25, 2010 well, honestly i do not know about wormfarms...but i do know that once i had a huge scoby grow in my car in a plastic bag from a few drops of a KT spill, and when i opened the bag the scoby was crawling with little worms...so those thrived on it but maybe those were vinegar eels.. tte > > Hi all, > I have an interesting question for which neither Google or seem to have an answer (yet). I just set up a new worm farm today, looking forward to get some good juices for my plants. > > I also have a continuous ferment jar of Kombucha in my kitchen, which I just cleaned out to remove excess yeast (I live in the tropical Far North Queensland in Australia, and I had not cleaned out the jar for a year, my brew was not fizzy and very sour), and I removed heaps of large scoby's. > > Just out of interest I wonder; if I would pulverize or cut up these scoby's would they do any good in the worm farm, or would the worms hate it? The worm farm manual says to avoid citrus, so maybe avoid acidic scoby's too? Are scoby's acidic? It is also recommended to add Lime once a month, to keep acidity down. > > Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated. > > Kind regards, > Jiska > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2010 Report Share Posted May 26, 2010 Jumping in and taking a guess.. The instructions I got with mine warned about adding too much fruit/onion skins to avoid over acidity. It also included " Worm Treats " and some pellets to add at the same interval as the treats to reduce acidity. So I'd GUESS not. You may well be right about Vinegar eels, they certainly don't sound like " Yer average " Earthworm. . (UK) ________________________________ From: Jahjet Sent: Wed, 26 May, 2010 4:36:56 well, honestly i do not know about wormfarms...but i do know that once i had a huge scoby grow in my car in a plastic bag from a few drops of a KT spill, and when i opened the bag the scoby was crawling with little worms...so those thrived on it but maybe those were vinegar eels.. tte > > Hi all, > I have an interesting question for which neither Google or seem to have an answer (yet). I just set up a new worm farm today, looking forward to get some good juices for my plants. > > I also have a continuous ferment jar of Kombucha in my kitchen, which I just cleaned out to remove excess yeast (I live in the tropical Far North Queensland in Australia, and I had not cleaned out the jar for a year, my brew was not fizzy and very sour), and I removed heaps of large scoby's. > > Just out of interest I wonder; if I would pulverize or cut up these scoby's would they do any good in the worm farm, or would the worms hate it? The worm farm manual says to avoid citrus, so maybe avoid acidic scoby's too? Are scoby's acidic? It is also recommended to add Lime once a month, to keep acidity down. > > Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated. > > Kind regards, > Jiska > ------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2010 Report Share Posted May 26, 2010 Can the scobys be used in an compost heap?? From: ozchristensen <ozchristensen@...> Subject: Can a Scoby go in the worm farm kombucha tea Date: Tuesday, May 25, 2010, 7:39 AM Â Hi all, I have an interesting question for which neither Google or seem to have an answer (yet). I just set up a new worm farm today, looking forward to get some good juices for my plants. I also have a continuous ferment jar of Kombucha in my kitchen, which I just cleaned out to remove excess yeast (I live in the tropical Far North Queensland in Australia, and I had not cleaned out the jar for a year, my brew was not fizzy and very sour), and I removed heaps of large scoby's. Just out of interest I wonder; if I would pulverize or cut up these scoby's would they do any good in the worm farm, or would the worms hate it? The worm farm manual says to avoid citrus, so maybe avoid acidic scoby's too? Are scoby's acidic? It is also recommended to add Lime once a month, to keep acidity down. Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated. Kind regards, Jiska Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 26, 2010 Report Share Posted May 26, 2010 Yae, verily. There's a mighty list of other suggestions I'm sure the horde will chime in with. From " liquidising " as a cream for various topical applications, through keeping in a " SCOBY hotel " as spares, right down to feeding the goats and making dog-chews. HTH . (UK) ________________________________ From: E. Sent: Wed, 26 May, 2010 22:13:44 Can the scobys be used in an compost heap?? From: ozchristensen <ozchristensen@...> Subject: Can a Scoby go in the worm farm kombucha tea Date: Tuesday, May 25, 2010, 7:39 AM Hi all, I have an interesting question for which neither Google or seem to have an answer (yet). I just set up a new worm farm today, looking forward to get some good juices for my plants. I also have a continuous ferment jar of Kombucha in my kitchen, which I just cleaned out to remove excess yeast (I live in the tropical Far North Queensland in Australia, and I had not cleaned out the jar for a year, my brew was not fizzy and very sour), and I removed heaps of large scoby's. Just out of interest I wonder; if I would pulverize or cut up these scoby's would they do any good in the worm farm, or would the worms hate it? The worm farm manual says to avoid citrus, so maybe avoid acidic scoby's too? Are scoby's acidic? It is also recommended to add Lime once a month, to keep acidity down. Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated. Kind regards, Jiska Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2010 Report Share Posted May 30, 2010 I think scoby's should be fine in the worm bin, as long as you apply the usual rule of not overwhelming the bin with one ingredient in particular. so if you want to see how the worms react to the scoby's, start with one, mix it with other food scraps. the same rule applies for citrus, coffee ground, etc. just not too much. especially when you're not sure how the worms are going to react. - > > Hi all, > I have an interesting question for which neither Google or seem to have an answer (yet). I just set up a new worm farm today, looking forward to get some good juices for my plants. > > I also have a continuous ferment jar of Kombucha in my kitchen, which I just cleaned out to remove excess yeast (I live in the tropical Far North Queensland in Australia, and I had not cleaned out the jar for a year, my brew was not fizzy and very sour), and I removed heaps of large scoby's. > > Just out of interest I wonder; if I would pulverize or cut up these scoby's would they do any good in the worm farm, or would the worms hate it? The worm farm manual says to avoid citrus, so maybe avoid acidic scoby's too? Are scoby's acidic? It is also recommended to add Lime once a month, to keep acidity down. > > Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated. > > Kind regards, > Jiska > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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