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News / Northwest

Bellingham’s ‘worm lady’ digs Earth Day

She produces rich soil for garden with composting system

By Amy Kepferle, Cascadia Daily News
Published: April 26, 2022, 6:02am
3 Photos
Nancy Neil investigates her worm farm, "Wriggley Field." Because the red wigglers are so adept at breaking down food waste, there is little odor.
Nancy Neil investigates her worm farm, "Wriggley Field." Because the red wigglers are so adept at breaking down food waste, there is little odor. (Amy Kepferle/Cascadia Daily News) Photo Gallery

For Nancy Neil, every day truly is Earth Day.

The self-described “worm lady” has spent the past 15 years perfecting a composting system that not only drastically reduces household food waste but also produces rich, loamy soil that she uses in her vegetable garden.

The secret to Neil’s success can be found in two large garbage-bag-sized canvas containers hanging from a wooden rack in the neat-as-a-pin garage attached to her house off of Chuckanut Drive. When opened, the bags reveal countless red wiggler worms who are fed the vegetable and fruit scraps that accumulate in Neil’s freezer every week. Each worm is a descendant of the first batch she ordered off the internet after a local woman she met taught her how to operate a table saw to build her first bin.

“I ordered 1,000 online, and I probably have tens of thousands now,” Neil said, working a trowel through the soil to bring the critters to the surface. She’d placed cantaloupe slices on the top of each container to entice “Stanley” “the collective name of the worms residing at ‘Wriggley Field’”and was eager to demonstrate how the most common composting worm in the world gets down to the business of producing soil while also reproducing.

After opening the bottom of the bag to harvest the worm’s castings (also referred to as “poop”), Neil worked through the soil to find a variety of sizes of wigglers to show how they operate. Worms are hermaphrodites, she said, meaning they have both male and female parts that allow them to intertwine and exchange genetic information.

“Both worms get pregnant,” Neil said. “I think it’s the only fair way. Both worms will lay a cocoon, and the cocoons have between three and five baby worms in them. The worms hatch, and the process repeats.”

The circle of life continues in Neil’s garden, where a covered metal bin acts as a repository for the harvest of worm castings and the worms and eggs that remain. After adding a bucket of chopped-up leaves from one of four tumbling compost bins located at her property line, the process is nearly complete.

“It’s cellular self-sufficiency,” Neil said. “All these leaves are going back in the garden to feed the vegetables. Whatever worms are left, it gives them something to eat and keeps the bin from getting dense at the bottom. Next time I harvest, I’ll add another layer on top. I’ve already harvested once to get my garden beds ready.”

In the raised metal garden beds, Neil is currently growing spinach, kale, chard and fingerling potatoes. When the weather warms up, she’ll add tomato and pepper starts to the two beds that get the most sun. Using the hugelkultur method “which focuses on building garden beds from partially rotted woody material topped with compost and soil” Neil also adds bunny poop, straw, paper and kitchen scraps to the bottom of the beds.

“You don’t feed the plants, you feed the soil,” Neil said. “It’s the microbiology. Even the worst soil has nutrients that the plant needs. They just can’t access it. You need the microbes to be interacting with the soil.”

Earthworms also make their homes in the garden beds and do the work of creating tunnels that make it easier for the smaller wigglers to travel. And because the wet, rotted wood waters the soil from below, Neil rarely has to hydrate her plants. As a further measure, unglazed terra cotta pots called ollas are placed in the center of each bed. When filled with water, the plant’s roots gravitate toward the slow seepage from the pot.

Neil knows that not everybody is as passionate about worms as she is, but still thinks that people who want to experiment with them in their gardens shouldn’t be afraid to do so.

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