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Worms Farming On Farms

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by: FrederickSingletonne
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Word Count: 446
Date: Fri, 28 Jan 2011 Time: 6:57 PM
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Plantations are wide areas of land chosen for the planting and cultivation of industrial and trading crops like tobacco, cotton, sugar cane and coffee. You'll also find farms that exist for timber. Such large pieces of acreage are most common in tropical and subtropical countries. There's even a system of staggering the tilling of these harvests. Mostly, land owners commission resident laborers to care for and guard the plantations in return for cash or goods payments or maybe just authorization to live a percentage of the land. Did you know that worms farming could be applied to the land too?

Few individuals keep in mind that nature does not leave farms unattended. Even without artificial fertilizers, nature uses earthworms for the task. Earthworms are little, crawling creatures that reside within the soil. They are most common in moist soils, where they are able tolive and roam around more freely. It is well known these days that crops and earthworms are able to live symbiotically and harmoniously.

Earthworms feed on organic matter from trees like fallen leaves, tree bark and decaying fruit. The worms digest this material and expel castings, which in turn combine with the soil and provide necessary and important nourishment for use once more by the crops. However, worms do even more than this. Their burrowing motion facilitates additional oygenation of the soil and transports nutrients through the topsoil right down to the subsoil. The outcome is that trees and crops in plantations are healthier and more productive, producing more leaves and fruits that eventually get back in the soil to be consumed by the future generations of earthworms.

However, in farms, the presence of earthworms is always jeopardized. There are things that represent risks to worms such as the birds, insects and various animals that may prey on these crawling creatures. Aside from that, occasional droughts or drying of the soil especially during the summer months can certainly be a problem.

Thus, modern plantations are now beginning to put money into vermiculture worms produced in worms farming, which are obtainable on the market in bulk. Vermiculture worms are artificially reared in ideal conditions which are conducive to better and faster reproduction of worms. Such worms are sold so that they could be transferred to the earth in plantations. This way, the quantity of earthworms in such areas are substantially bolstered. It's not surprising that biodynamic farming is very useful even where great areas of land are involved.

Farms become more profitable when organic soil fertilizing methods are applied. It is just much safer and a lot more effective at the same time.

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For more information about how to worms farming visit the website http://www.wormfarming.co.za


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