![]() ![]() Of course it is entirely feasible to grow tiger and red worms purely on concentrated organic waste in a worm farm with no soil contact whatsoever. This can be achieved by burying organic materials such as kitchen scraps or by having the base of a worm farm in direct contact with the soil. ![]() In my experience, if the worms are supplied with an ongoing source of food that is in contact with the soil, they can happily live there by moving constantly between the organic food source and the soil. It is sometimes suggested in literature on worm farming that you cannot introduce tiger or red worms into your garden soil. Their use in worm farms is rapidly increasing as people are seeing the benefits of vermicomposting, particularly in city environments where the worms are particularly adaptable to the concentrated organic waste streams that are generated there. Tiger and red worms are thought to have originated in Europe and have then spread around the world with the European settlers that went to all corners of the globe. ![]()
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