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White Worms Box of culture
Item #1586682003

Current Auction Time: Sat May 18 03:12:55 2024


Final: $22.00 First Bid $22.00
Time left 00:00 # of Bids 1 (bid history)
Started Mar 29 2020 - 04:00:03 AM Location Veneta OR 87982 United States
Ended Apr 12 2020 - 04:00:03 AM
Auction Closed
Seller Food (356/360) 101-500
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High Bidder Bd79 (7/7)

Payment PayPal
Shipping Will Ship to United States Only Buyer Pays Fixed Amount,


Seller assumes all responsibility for listing this item. You should contact the seller to resolve any questions before bidding. Currency is U.S. dollars (US$) unless otherwise noted.

Description

PAYMENT:

$22(culture) + $9(priority shipping) = $31
My Paypal is a business account and accepts credit/debit.
Make immediate payment with Paypal at: ryanthehut@gmail.com


CULTURE:

A USPS priority flat rate box(5-3/8 x 8-5/8 1-5/8") filled with established medium. Add this to a shoebox size container for an instant culture. It will contain 50 to 100 worms and an unknown number of eggs. If I have extra worms, which I usually do, I will add more. The image is a picture of a culture I will take yours from. They ship well year round to all but the hottest environments.

Why white worms?:
I have cultured just about everything and white worms are easily my favorite. They are very easy, require little effort, and produce enormous harvests year round. I have kept this strain well over a decade, in my garage without any considerations, and have never had a problem. Cultures are highly prolific - compared to daphnia, a one gallon culture will contain around 100 daphnia, but the same size worm culture would contain 1,000+ worms.



CULTURE BASICS:

Medium:
I find most soil, peat, cocofiber, commercial bedding, and green kitchen scrub pads, all work well. I use cocofiber but don't recommend it more than other products. Medium can be the thinnest layer to several inches deep. Make it nice and wet.

Food:
They are composting worm and eat bread, cereal, rice, potato, and fruits & vegetables. Virtually any decaying organic matter is on their menu. It needs to be soft and wet. If it�s hard, like a broccoli stem, boil and mash it.

Temperature:
There is a lot of inaccurate/misleading information suggesting white worms be kept at an abnormally low temperature of 62 degrees. Enchytraeus Albidus, in North America, ranges from Canada to Virginia, as well as many other temperate parts of the world. For many strains, such as mine, places like our garages are edens. Also, many of these strains have been in the hobby for decades, such as this one, allowing it to further adapt to our home environments. Yes, there are strains you should keep at 62 degrees, but it�s absolutely unnecessary with mine.

My cultures sit in my garage so the temperature, so depending on the time of year, culture temperatures range 40 to 85 degrees. The ideal temperature range is between 55 to 75 degrees. A cool location is all that is needed for this culture - for me it�s my garage. Even though it can be 100+ degrees outside the concrete floor keeps my garage and cultures cool.

Culture Invaders / Mites:
This is another topic with a lot of inaccurate information. Every organism we culture has its invaders, but because it's something easily visible in a WW culture it gets discussed disproportionately. Invaders are usually a non issue because they aren�t likely interested in living worms when there are worms that die naturally every day. An invasive mite may actually be providing a helpful service by helping break down the bodies of worms that die naturally daily. If you do have an invader making an impact on your culture mitigate it. How? Tap on the culture to drive the worms deep into the medium, then remove the top layer of medium, and you will then have removed most of the mites.

Harvesting:
Place a plastic deli container lid over their food and the worms will crawl onto it. Dip that directly into your fish tanks.



GUARANTEE:

If DOA I will send a replacement at no cost. Please don't file a return as that usually adds additional steps for us both - just message me and I will send another without a guilt trip.

FYI: During shipping distance isn't a risk factor. What will kill the culture is if it's left in the elements after being delivered to your home. It's critical the package not be left in your mailbox so meet your mail carrier.



INSTRUCTIONS AFTER RECEIVING PACKAGE:

White worms are long and can be damaged if over-handled. Don't stir or rummage through the medium after you receive it.

Add the medium into a shoebox size container that has a couple small holes in the lid

I remove moisture from the medium prior to shipping so it doesn't leech water into the packaging. When in their new container add water.

Add a small piece of bread in the center.

Place your new culture in a cool location out of sunlight.



WHITE WORM MAN:

For additional culturing content visit my YouTube channel: White Worm Man
or
White worm culturing video: White Worm Culturing



GRINDAL WORM vs. WHITE WORM:

I have decades of experience culturing both these worms, offer both for sale, and there is one important difference to consider before deciding which to culture - that is temperature. If it wasn�t for temperature these two worms are equally easy to culture. Both these worms are �temperate� species but each has a different ideal temperature.

White Worm Temperatures:
White worms are robust to a very wide range of temperatures. In North America white worms can be found from Canada to Virginia, so most of the United States has ideal culturing weather. My cultures sit on a shelf in my garage and I harvest year round.

The ideal temperature is 55 to 75 degrees. My outdoor temperatures normally range 25 to 105 degrees, my garage 40 to 90 degrees, and culture temperatures from 40 to 85 degrees...but anywhere between 55 to 75 degrees is best.

Grindal Worm Temperatures:
What�s nice about grindal worms is they prefer the exact same temperatures us humans like, so every home has a location you can keep a culture.

The ideal temperature is 78 to 85 degrees. Culture temperatures safely range 65 to 90 degrees.


Let me summarize this. Grindal worms like to be warm and hate being cold. White worms like to be cool and hate being warm. Other than this difference they are equally easy to culture.



Bid History:

Bidders Bid Time Bid Comments
Bd79 (7/7)  Apr 2 2020 - 01:48:31 PM $22.00 BUY IT NOW

Auction is closed

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