Worm Chow NOW Available!

Uncle Dave's Organic Worm Farm offers the finest food for your worms, UD Worm Chow! Don't be fooled by others offering worm food or worm chow which is a homemade mix lacking in essential minerals and vitamins. Homemade worm food can also contain seeds, hence contaminating your worm castings. 

 

 

 

Directions:

Feed worms daily or adjust feeding schedule to management program. When surface feeding, sprinkle the bed lightly with water and scatter the feed lightly over the bed surface. Adjust the amount of feed to what the worms will consume daily. When redworms are raised in bedding which contains composted organics (food items, manure, etc.) decrease the feeding rate. Be sure the feed is consumed before additional feeding. The amount of feed depends upon the number of worms in the bed. Overfeeding may lead to a sour, moldy bedding which is undesirable. For best results, stir or turn the bedding at least twice a week. Keep the bedding loose and well aerated. Either mix approximately 5% agricultural limestone in with the feed or sprinkle the bedding lightly with agricultrual limestone (use calcium carbonate; do not use prepared or dehydrated lime or calcium oxide) each time the bedding is turned. Do not sprinkle feed or limestone directly upon worms.

Ingredients:

Ground corn, ground soybean hulls, wheat middlings, dehydrated alfalfa, cane molasses, calcium carbonate, porcine meat meal, dehulled soybean meal, ground oats, ground wheat, dicalcium phosphate, monocalcium phosphate, fish meal, dried beet pulp, wheat germ, corn gluten meal, salt, soybean oil, porcine animal fat preserved with BHA, folic acid, choline chloride, DL-alpha tocopheryl acetate, riboflavin, pyridoxine hydrochloride, nicotinic acid, menadione dimethylpyrimidinol bisulphate, calcium pantothenate, vitamin B-12 supplement, vitamin A acetate, manganous oxide, zinc oxide, ferrous carbonate, copper, sulfate, zinc sulfate, calcium iodate, cobalt carbonate.

Storage:

Store in dry well ventilated area free from rodents and insects.

 


October 10, 2011 — David Duddy