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Peter 02-03-2003 12:21 PM

Tiny white worms in compost bin
 
I have just opened the bottom door on my compost bin to find plenty of
regular worms and millions on tiny white threadlike worms. Are these good
bad or indifferent?

The bin is full and the compost at the bottom seems well rotted.

Thanks

Peter



Gary Woods 02-03-2003 02:31 PM

Tiny white worms in compost bin
 
"Peter" wrote:

I have just opened the bottom door on my compost bin to find plenty of
regular worms and millions on tiny white threadlike worms


Indifferent, I think. They often show up in a worm bin.... my plywood
indoor one has some... and don't seem to cause problems. I once actually
bought some of them to culture to feed tropical fish, which love them! In
that world they're called "white worms." You feed them from a little
plastic perforated cone suspended in the water; the idea is that the worms
crawl out a few at a time and are eaten immediately, so not burrowing into
the gravel, drowning, and fouling the water.
Which is more than you really wanted to know. I do that.


Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at www.albany.net/~gwoods
Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1200' elevation. NY WO G

Peter 02-03-2003 05:31 PM

Tiny white worms in compost bin
 
Nah - fascinating :) - thanks :)

"Gary Woods" wrote in message
...
"Peter" wrote:

I have just opened the bottom door on my compost bin to find plenty of
regular worms and millions on tiny white threadlike worms


Indifferent, I think. They often show up in a worm bin.... my plywood
indoor one has some... and don't seem to cause problems. I once actually
bought some of them to culture to feed tropical fish, which love them! In
that world they're called "white worms." You feed them from a little
plastic perforated cone suspended in the water; the idea is that the worms
crawl out a few at a time and are eaten immediately, so not burrowing into
the gravel, drowning, and fouling the water.
Which is more than you really wanted to know. I do that.


Gary Woods AKA K2AHC- PGP key on request, or at www.albany.net/~gwoods
Zone 5/6 in upstate New York, 1200' elevation. NY WO G




Alison 02-03-2003 08:04 PM

Tiny white worms in compost bin
 

"Peter" wrote in message
...
I have just opened the bottom door on my compost bin to find plenty of
regular worms and millions on tiny white threadlike worms. Are these good
bad or indifferent?

The bin is full and the compost at the bottom seems well rotted.

Thanks

Peter

I worried about these things for months when I started making compost and
leaf mould. I collected a sample and was informed by a fairly reliable
source that they are 'good guys' and prefer the leaf mould (which I can
vouch for cos there's lots more in the becoming-almost-useable leaf
collecting bin).

--A



Martin B. 02-03-2003 11:03 PM

Tiny white worms in compost bin
 
and I thought they were just babies

--
Martin B.


"Trevor Rimmer" wrote in message
...
They are nematode worms - numerous different species. If you dig up any
reasonably fertile soil and *really* look hard at it you will see them.
The ones in the soil are generally good guys, but some are parasitic -
eg on slugs. Humans have their own nematode parasites (but not the ones
that you see in the soil I hasten to add).

TrevR

The message
from "Alison" o.uk
contains these words:


"Peter" wrote in message
...
I have just opened the bottom door on my compost bin to find plenty of
regular worms and millions on tiny white threadlike worms. Are these

good
bad or indifferent?

The bin is full and the compost at the bottom seems well rotted.

Thanks

Peter

I worried about these things for months when I started making compost

and
leaf mould. I collected a sample and was informed by a fairly reliable
source that they are 'good guys' and prefer the leaf mould (which I can
vouch for cos there's lots more in the becoming-almost-useable leaf
collecting bin).


--A







Trevor Rimmer 03-03-2003 08:54 PM

Tiny white worms in compost bin
 
They are nematode worms - numerous different species. If you dig up any
reasonably fertile soil and *really* look hard at it you will see them.
The ones in the soil are generally good guys, but some are parasitic -
eg on slugs. Humans have their own nematode parasites (but not the ones
that you see in the soil I hasten to add).

TrevR

The message
from "Alison" o.uk
contains these words:


"Peter" wrote in message
...
I have just opened the bottom door on my compost bin to find plenty of
regular worms and millions on tiny white threadlike worms. Are these good
bad or indifferent?

The bin is full and the compost at the bottom seems well rotted.

Thanks

Peter

I worried about these things for months when I started making compost and
leaf mould. I collected a sample and was informed by a fairly reliable
source that they are 'good guys' and prefer the leaf mould (which I can
vouch for cos there's lots more in the becoming-almost-useable leaf
collecting bin).


--A





dommy 12-06-2003 07:14 PM

I would have thought they were baby brandling worms no?

Seeing as they are in a compost pile the worms would multiply and the results would be small white threadlike worms:confused:

bnd777 12-06-2003 09:56 PM

Tiny white worms in compost bin
 
Definitely tiny baby Brandling worms .......usually theres 2 or 3 batches a
year especially in worm bins

"dommy" wrote in message
s.com...
I would have thought they were baby brandling worms no?

Seeing as they are in a compost pile the worms would multiply and the
results would be small white threadlike worms:confused:
--
dommy
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