digitS' :
I was half-way expecting that subject to pop up when I suggested supplementing animal protein in the "gardening for chickens" thread.
My compost pile right now is literally teaming with red worms. Of course, those worms are
making compost and pulling them out would limit the speed of the composting and the nutrient value of the compost I put on the garden. The chicken manure and compost make reasonably fertile garden soil.
Raising worms specifically for chickens has interested me until I began to realize that they need to be and are
fed by people who are raising very many. Want to have a lot of worms - you gotta feed them. So what can you feed them? Gosh, worm feed looks an awful lot like chicken feed.
Steve
I have read up on making your own worm bin online. they say you use shredded up newspaper(lots of it) then wet it down and add kitchen scraps. They also like cardboard. Now these are not your earthworms. They are redworms that you get for vermiculture. A differnt worm than you find in your yard. You can also add coffee grounds with filters, egg shells and tea bags. Pretty much anything you put in your compost pile. Then they will compost it for you, make a nice "tea" for your garden. Once they have ate through the food you start a new bin. I imagine that if you did not have enough scraps from your family you would have to add some type of feed. Right now I give edible scraps to the chickens but It would be more efficiant to give the scraps to the worms, along with what I don't give the chickens like banana peels and such, and then feed the extra worms to the chckens.
Once your worms have multiplied, you can add the extras to start a new bin or give them to your chickens, put the castings and tea right in your garden and leave enough starter worms to keep going.
Here is a link to the info.
http://whatcom.wsu.edu/ag/compost/Easywormbin.htm