Monday, December 26, 2011

Starting Your Own Worm Farm

Author: Earthwormsinfo

"Ego is not a dirty word" was a famous song put out by Australian band Skyhooks.

Now as we end 2011 and enter into 2012 there is a new word that is no longer dirty "Green". For a long time the word green has been associated with unemployed trouble makers always tying themselves to a tree for the better good. And even though these causes were just, it was always frowned upon by the general public and the authorities.

In today's society the word green is used more and more by business wishing to portray being environmentally friendly and eco aware. As we understand more about the climate and the damage caused by neglect we look towards better and more environmentally friendly ways to go about our daily lives. We have seen the introduction of considerably more environmentally friendly products in the last ten years than we have in the previous 50 years. And each new year sees more eco products hitting our shelves in electrical products, grocery items, manufacturing and automobiles. Thru purchasing these products we can start to do more to help our troubled planet.

Another fun and educational way we can start to make a difference is through recycling with earthworms. Setting up a worm farm is relatively inexpensive and easy to maintain but the long term benefits outweigh the any expensive tenfold. For millions of years earthworms have gone about their daily business of recycling waste material into rich healthy soil.

In soil the benefits include.

  • Improves its physical structure
  • Enriches soil with micro-organisms (adding enzymes such as phosphate and cellulose)
  • Microbial activity in worm castings is 10 to 20 times higher than in the soil and organic matter that the worm ingests
  • Improves water holding capacity

Worm castings, (waste material from worms) have been shown to be richer in many nutrients than compost produced by other composting methods. It is rich in microbial life which converts nutrients already present in the soil into plant-available forms and unlike other compost, worm castings also contain worm mucus which helps prevent nutrients from washing away with the first watering and holds moisture better than plain soil.

If you decide to make your own worm farm, it can be simple, fun and extremely educational for children. Containers can be made from an assortment of materials such as timber, plastic polystyrene and even old car or truck tires, and the composting worms can be purchased from a variety of sources. A rule of thumb though is to make sure there is some form of drainage tap or similar device in the bottom to release the excess liquid. If left in the worm farm for too long it will become stagnate. Also if only making a small worm farm, be sure not to overstock with worms, as population will be governed by size of farm and available food, so too many worm in a small area will result in a lot dying.

If you are not feeling confident in building your own worm farm, then there are literally hundreds available on the market to purchase. These vary in size depending on your recycling need and can range from a single tray system to the larger models with multiple trays, as well as a assortment of shapes and colours depending on your tastes. I personally opted for a manufactured (from recycled plastic) as my first worm farm as the majority on the market have been made with many of years of testing behind them to produce a product that is highly efficient in the recycling of waste material as well as giving the best possible environment for worms to do what they do best-recycle.

Unfortunately when it comes to the worms it is not as easy as going into the back yard and digging some up. The best worms for composting are Tigers –Eisenta Fetida, Blues-Perionix Excavatus/Spenceralia, Reds-Eisenia Andrei and African Night Crawlers-Eudrilus Eugenia. Again these can be purchased from a variety of sources and do not fear about having them delivered as nearly all commercial worm farmers package their worms in such a manner that loss of worms is to a minimum.

Besides the two main components used in worm farms-the worms and the farm-you should also consider a worm mat to place under the lid and on top of the soil to help your worms feel safe as well as keeping the farm dark and moist. The last thing on the list is a good worm conditioner. Worm Farm & Compost Conditioner helps neutralise acidity and balance the pH levels in your worm farm or compost bin. This means your worms can digest larger quantities of food waste faster.

Maintaining a healthy worm farm takes very little time or energy, whilst the benefit are many. Besides your worm castings, a worm farm produced an excellent supply of worm tea. Worm tea is an extremely concentrated liquid mix of all the goodness, extracted from the worm cast or vermicast used in the making of the worm extracts. This liquid worm extract contains all the bacteria, fungi, protozoa and nematodes as well as all the nutrients and minerals that the worm castings, vermicast contained. Once extracted it is best to dilute it 10:1 in water.

Worm tea is a nutritious tonic which is really helpful when:

  • your vegies and plants are flowering
  • or fruit is ripening.

Rich worm tea also supports:

  • diseased and stressed plants,
  • protects them against insects
  • and even helps establish young plants.

Charles Darwin once wrote:"Without the work of this humble creature, who knows nothing of the benefits he confers upon mankind, agriculture, as we know it, would be very difficult, if not wholly impossible". Even though he was more famous for his work on evolution, Charles Darwin spent much of his life studying earthworms and their effect on the environment. Through his work we are able to understand how important these small creatures are to not only mankind but to the planet as a whole.

So whether you decide to undertake worm farming with just a small farm or a multi tray system or even on a commercial basis, starting a worm farm can be a very rewarding project to undertake not to mention the huge environmental benefit associated with it.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/gardening-articles/starting-your-own-worm-farm-5353354.html

About the Author

Having always been interested in earthworms, I have set out to help people understand the importance of earthworms in the environment and how much we can benefit from recycling through worm farms. Visit Earthwormsinfo and learn more about earthworms.


   

Friday, December 16, 2011

First Moved

Guest post from: Denver Stephens

When we first moved in we didn’t have internet service at home – that was a huge hassle. I recommend to anyone moving that they should get all of their utilities set up BEFORE they get into the new house. I can’t believe there are so many things to remember and I’m thinking about putting together a checklist to post online so other people can have some help getting it right the first time. Anyway, our house is really starting to feel like a home and I can’t wait to nest and make this place feel like where we live rather than just some white walls. I love to decorate and I’ve got a lot of great ideas to make this place feel more modern and homey – that’s what you get from four years of design school! Anyway, Mike and I are really excited to get to know the neighborhood and to live together for the first time – it’s going to be new and different for both of us but I know it’s going to be fun!

Starting a Small Farm: Marketing Options

Author: Eric Powers

Small farms have a number of options to sell their product and do not need to choose just one. However, it may be in your best interest to make a strategic choice between these options for distribution and to organize your operations around taking full advantage of it.

Selling To Distributors

If you would like to find the path involving the least marketing for your farm, it is best to sell your crops to a regional distributor who buys from many farms, and sells products on to stores, other manufacturers, or restaurants. The benefits of this system will be selling to fewer customers, and therefore reducing your need for sales personnel and marketing once you find the distributors who will buy from you. The disadvantage is that when you have fewer customers you are more at their mercy to accept lower prices for your products.

Selling To Retailers

Selling to stores, especially independent stores focusing on farm-fresh foods, will be somewhat more marketing-intensive. You may need to find multiple stores to sell to in order to move the same amount of product as when you sell to customers. However, you should be able to command higher prices as you are, in effect, cutting out a middle man from the supply chain.

Selling at Farmers Markets

By selling your products directly at farmers markets, you can potentially cut out all of the middle men and sell your products at market prices, or even above them. Consumers will often pay a premium for farm-fresh foods with the knowledge that they are helping farmers directly. Selling at farmers markets is time-intensive, however, requiring you to transport products to the market, staff a booth, and return unsold products. Investment in a van or truck and booth equipment will be necessary. Once these direct costs are taken into account, check how much you must sell to break even over time and whether this is reasonable to expect.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/starting-a-small-farm-marketing-options-1462265.html

About the Author

Are you looking for more tips on opening a farm or advice on developing farm business plans? Call 877-BIZ-PLAN to learn how Growthink can help you build your farm business.
  

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Start a Small Farm or Make Money From Your Garden

Author: orlowski teng

Have you wanted to start a small farm? Interested in organic farming? Want to start a country Bed & Breakfast? Would you like to produce a nature-related home business income stream and make money from your garden? Any or all of these are more attainable now than ever.

Their size can range from an urban rooftop to a small town backyard to small acreage in the country. It's wonderful to have the sunlight and birdsong be your "office surroundings," and to tend the earth's life force while high class restaurants, world travelers, or your local community eagerly pay premium prices for your organic, heirloom and sustainable products.

You can grow many crops: Vintage cutting or edible flowers, rare ethnic and culinary herbs, medicinal herbs, heirloom and gourmet vegetables. There's a growing trend among those from urbanites to small town dwellers to those with small rural acreage (or in the process of buying it), who are starting sustainable home businesses that are earth and family friendly, or living the country life as real farmers again with rural traditions and the sound of birds and crickets from their porches. The huge demand for local, sustainable, and heirloom and gourmet foods, plus the growing demand for hand-made artisan foods and sustainably produced unique flowers and other unusual ornamentals is fueling this trend.

Farm examples include one who grows the crop used to make brooms, and sells hand-made ornamental or vintage brooms from his own crop. Or the spa mini-farmer who grows fresh ingredients for the facials for her local spas and estheticians, such as lavender, cucumber, and even pumpkin now proven to benefit the skin. Or the couple who raise tiny Shetland sheep that produce wool in many natural colors, and make hand-woven blankets sold for high prices online and to tourists who visit their area.

Whether you're planning to start a small farm, begin organic farming, start a country Bed & Breakfast, or earn money from your garden, to begin making this dream come true, start with the concept of the "Micro Eco-Farm" that brings them all together. It's the 21st century version of sustainably producing from the land in larger quantities in smaller space than anytime in history, because with technology and world travel, humans have now discovered and blended the best growing techniques that combine ancient discoveries (such as Chinese or French intensive growing methods) with cutting edge research on creating living soils and sustainable food supplies in smaller spaces than ever before understood.

To start a small farm, use micro eco-farming techniques to begin from as small as a half acre, and even stop there, or grow into a few more acres if you have the land. Start in your spare time until your business has built up enough to let you quit your office job. Micro eco-farming involves organic farming techniques, but adds beyond organics to make your mini-farm more productive than any farm in humankind's history.

To start a country Bed & Breakfast, plan your B&B's breakfast menus first, then design the small farm to grow the menu's products, the organic farm that will wrap around your B&B from the information gleaned from your menu. You may want to raise laying hens, blueberries, strawberries, a few antique apple and pear trees, an herbal tea garden, and a couple dairy goats. Your B&B customers will love this small farming demonstration and setting, and it all "synergizes." The goats and hens will provide organic fertilizer along with ingredients for breakfast omelets and yogurt, the chickens and goats can eat prunings from the plant crops, which will provide your customers with freshly baked blueberry muffins, strawberry jam and pear butter (which can also be sold as a product to your customers) and spicy apple bread and apple cider.

To make money from your garden, the possibilities are endless. You can grow a cutting garden with a flower stand out front to earn money from your garden, or sell the flower bouquets to in-town B&Bs that don't grow their own, or to restaurants and hotels; sell high priced rare gourmet food crops to nearby five star restaurants, such as rare edible flowers or fresh ethnic food crops.

Whether you plan to start a small farm, earn money in organic farming, make money from your garden, or open a country Bed & Breakfast, your livelihood will be helping restore the planet by maintaining green life and living soil to your outdoor "office."




Barba



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Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/internet-marketing-articles/start-a-small-farm-or-make-money-from-your-garden-3885348.html

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My New House

I appreciate the guest post, Jewel Rodgers

When I started looking into texas electricity providers after the move it got me thinking, what else should I do research on before I get settled in here? I had thought about doing some home improvements but I wasn’t sure what I needed to get started and then it hit me: why not ask my brother? He’s a contractor and he knows more than any book about how to renovate a house! He came down last week and we got started – painting was easy because it’s something I could do without a lot of supervision, and he worked on the wainscoting. I think this place is going to look absolutely custom when we’re done and since I originally bought this place as an investment property I think it’s going to be really paying off by the time I go to sell it. But for now we’ve put so much work into making it my style I can’t imagine ever leaving. I love that there is so much “me” when you walk in my front door!

Monday, December 12, 2011

Urban Survival Supplies

Author: Susan Hovis

Today's topic is urban survival supplies.  We have seen many survival shows portray wilderness survival, plane crashes, mountain climbing gone wrong, etc.  But, for most of us, we need to prepare to survive at home, school or the office in the event of some emergency or natural disaster.

Emergency preparedness urban survival supplies should include some main areas:  shelter, food, water, first aid, light and communication, sanitation and hygiene, security and self-defense, reference guide, survival kits and a survival garden.

Shelter

If you are able to stay in your house, school or office, then your shelter is already provided.  However, if you are forced to move, you may have to improvise on your shelter.  It would be wise to have a tarp and space blanket or sleeping bag as part of your urban survival supplies, just in case your next shelter isn't as nice.   The goal is to keep warm, dry and protected from the elements.  Also, have a way to start a fire, which may be necessary for heat, cooking and light.  Keep matches and lighters as part of your urban survival supplies.

Food

An emergency or natural disaster could last 3 days, weeks or months depending on the situation.  Most organizations, such as the Red Cross or FEMA recommend at least 72 hours of food and water to be stored in your home, office, school or in a grab and go bag.

After watching the aftermath of all the recent earthquakes and the not so recent Katrina hurricane, it would be a good idea to keep at least one month and up to 12 months of storage food as part of your urban survival supplies.

Store food that requires no refrigeration, with a combination of dehydrated/freeze dried food and canned goods.  Choose foods that you and your family will eat, such as:  canned meats, fruits, vegetables, protein bars, dry cereal, peanut butter, dried fruit, nuts, crackers, powdered milk, beans and any special needs.

Water

Each person will need one gallon of water per day (drinking and sanitation).  It is hard to store enough water beyond two weeks per person, so investing in a good water filter is helpful.  Also keep plain bleach on hand or chemical treatment pills for additional methods of purifying the water.  Store your water in clean food grade plastic containers, and rotate every 6 months or so.

First Aid

It is best to have some basic first aid knowledge/training, in order to assist others and to keep yourself safe.  There are many different types of first aid kits that are available for portable use and for keeping in your home, school or place of business.  You will need to decide what first aid kits are necessary for your urban survival supplies.  You will want to have adhesive bandages, alcohol/cleanser pads, sterile dressings and other supplies.

Light and Communication

Your urban survival supplies should include some forms of light and communication.  Keep a combination of different types such as, candles, oil lamps, 4-in-1 emergency wind-up flashlight radio alarm cell phone charger combo, matches, lighters, extra batteries and a survival whistle.  Another great tool would be two-way radios, if you have more than one person.

Sanitation and Hygiene

Keep a good supply of your personal hygiene products on hand and also your household cleaning and kitchen supplies.  Extra paper towels, toilet paper, garbage bags and other products will come in handy too.  You may not be able to use your toilet if the water supply is shut off.  If this happens, it would be good to have a portable toilet with sawdust or chemical treatments.  Also, use garbage bags to line the toilet for easier cleanup.

Security and Self-Defense

Prevention is the best way to secure your home, by trimming shrubs, installing good dead bolt locks with solid doors.  Have good window locks and a ladder/rope for the upper level in case escape is needed.

Self-defense is up to the individual, and may include some sort of fighting/martial arts training and weapons.  Guns are useful for hunting and self-defense, and it is recommended to have a handgun, a pump shotgun, a small rifle, ammunition and cleaning tools for each one.  There are many varieties available, so ask your friends and a gun shop dealer what would work best for you.

Reference Guides and Skills

Now is a good time to gather some good reference guides on emergency preparedness as part of your urban survival supplies.  There are some great online sources as well, but in the middle of an emergency, it is better to have a physical book on hand.

Check out these two great books, "It's a Disaster! ... and what are you gonna do about it?" by Bill & Janet Liebsch and "Making the Best of Basics Family Preparedness Handbook" by James Talmage Stevens.  Both are wonderful books.  I had the pleasure of listening to James at a Preparedness Expo years ago, and he signed my book.  Now, he has an updated edition with much more material.  I've had some nice conversations with Janet Liebsch as well, and am impressed with the quality and layout of the book.

Some online resources are:

National Weather Service (NOAA) Safety Information

30 Tips for Emergency Preparedness from Homeland Security (DHS)

Red Cross - Preparing and Getting Trained

Survival Kits

There are many different survival kits out there, designed for a variety of needs.  These include personal/family, evacuation, hunting, office, car, pet, children and classroom lockdown school kits.  Many churches, schools and businesses are also implementing emergency plans.  Make sure you know how these plans involve or affect you and your loved ones and add the appropriate survival kits to you urban survival supplies.

Survival Seeds for a Survival Garden

I just love to plant some vegetables every year and taste those fresh veggies right from the back yard!  Some folks take it a whole notch higher than me, and plant a huge plot.  Whatever your property will allow, just do what you can do.

It is recommended to have non-hybrid, heirloom, non-gmo preparedness seeds (survival seeds), which can be harvested at the end of the season and used for planting for years to come.  These seeds break the cycle of constantly buying from the seed company year after year.  These are suitable for your everyday vegetable garden or a survival garden (emergency garden).
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/home-and-family-articles/urban-survival-supplies-4691191.html

About the Author

Find emergency preparedness for a disaster, survivalist gear, storage food and a variety of survival kits.  Susan Hovis provides self-reliance information and supplies to help in your emergency planning.  SurvivalKitFood.com




   

Monday, December 5, 2011

Why Would I Need Emergency Food or a Survival Kit?

Author: 2012-Survival-Tools.com

Why would I need emergency food or a survival kit? Because of this simple fact: The world's population rate is growing rapidly and so is the demand for food to feed this growing population. Our food demands are outgrowing our food supply recourses, commercial growers just can't keep up with this huge demand, so you do the math.

That's not the only reason we could have a food shortage, just look at the recent earthquake and tsunami in Japan. A perfect example of how a natural disaster can disrupt one's ability to find basic living essentials during an emergency.

If you're thinking this could never happen to me, think again!

We purchase auto insurance for our autos and home owners insurance for our homes. When you purchase these policies you are preparing for the worst, so why would you not want to be prepared for a natural disaster or emergency situation by having emergency food and a survival kit for you and your family?

I look at my emergency food storage just like I do my auto insurance policy, it's best to have it and never need it than to need it and not have it. With my emergency food supply if I don't need it we can always consume it.

You have a number of options when it comes to preparing for your emergency food storage plan.

You can prepare your own emergency food storage supply by growing a garden and canning the food from your garden. The best part of preparing your own home grown emergency food is, you can store the foods that you and your family know and like the most.

Perhaps you don't have enough space where you currently live to grow the amount of food it would take to sustain your family. If this is the case you could easily purchase Meals Ready to Eat or (MRE's) or Freeze Dried Foods by the case that is designed to last 25+ years. There are numerous companies around the world that offer emergency food kits and Survival Gear for any disaster situation.

With the recent natural disasters occurring throughout the world and the constant uncertainty with our current economy many emergency food supply companies are raising thier prices. It boils down to the basic supply and demand of their products; people who thought it was insane to prepare and have an emergency food supply are now thinking it's not such a bad idea after all.

Be careful when purchasing emergency food and survival kits online because some companies are taking advantage of the current situation which is the main reason I was writing this article. I'm just like most everyone else and it makes me angry to see companies gouging people when they should be helping them get the products their seeking and offer them at a fair price.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/home-and-family-articles/why-would-i-need-emergency-food-or-a-survival-kit-4664588.html

About the Author

2012-Survival-Tools.com is committed to bringing you high quality Emergency Foods and Survival Gear you can use in a real world emergency. Our Survival Gear will sustain you by providing top quality food, water and other necessary equipment you will need in order to survive any disaster situation.