RI Worm Composters Network
Just returned from my first orientation. It was held at the Cooperative Extension Education Center on the URI Kingston Campus. I already had been through the URI Master Composter & Recycler Program and feel like I'm ready to take on my own worm herd.
The Worm Ladies of Charlestown conducted training. They're a source for red wigglers and are helping us get wiggling. They started with the wigglers to clean up the waste products from the Angora rabbits they raise. So that's why their website is http://www.angoraandworms.com/
But earthworm taxonomists don’t have it so easy. One has to dig for earthworms, and even though they are blind and deaf, worms are remarkably good at evading the probes and shovels of nosy scientists. There’s also the problem of knowing where to dig. An ornithologist can simply meander through a forest and look up; an oligochaetologist must keep an ear to the ground, so to speak, and try to divine the ideal earthworm habitat.


