Mealworms... my story. Almost impossible not to raise them!

If you have a small flock of chickens, 6-10, you could do the shoebox (also used aquariums work fine, 5- gallon buckets, ...) bin method, adding a shoebox every once in a while as you get comfortable with the procedure (or not, no big investment if you decide it's not for you). And you could keep it under the vanity in your bathroom or under the kitchen sink. They don't need light and the beetles don't fly. I started with one bin on top of the refrigerator in the garage. Now I have a 3-drawer storage thing and keep it next to the fridge in the garage. Since we get cold winters it does get below freezing in the garage in the winter. Last winter I figured I had killed them all from the freezing and would have to start with new stock in the Spring, kind of a bummer because they take a few months to get going. But as I procrastinated with other more important projects as the weather warmed, one day I noticed movement in the wheat bran when I opened a drawer. The beetles died, but something (eggs?) made it through the winter.

As long as you add something for moisture once in a while (I like baby carrots) they seem to do just fine without any attention. If you are going to keep more than one bin I've found it advantageous to move the full grown beetles to a new, no worms in it, bin about once every 4 weeks to keep the process going. Then you will have a good supply of worms to feed about once every 10 days or so.

The only tip I have is to use something very fine for bedding, like wheat bran. If you use chicken crumble, oats, etc you will want to run it through a food processor to make it very fine. By using something fine for bedding it is easier to sift the worms out because the bedding will tend to fall through the sifter better. If you use chunky bedding (my bad at the outset) you will have to pick the worms out of the bin by hand as the bedding will not go through a sifter. And if you get a bigger sifter then the worms fall through with the bedding.
 
Question: I'm using oats (we have an old bag we were going to toss anyway) and I wondered if I put the worms and oats on top of a screen with holes big enough for the worms, but not big enough for the oats, would the worms migrate down and tend to fall through the screen? Especially if I put some more yummy stuff (apples, carrots, potato) below it with bran?
 
Rob, you should just dump the oats in. Really, don't worry about them, the critters will eat them all eventually. I will sometimes throw different grains in and they get eaten. You really don't need a screen other than to keep other things out of your colony. They really are that easy.
 
I have two of those plastic critter cages. I plan on having one for the meal worms and one for the beetles to live in. Once I move the beetles into the second container and they lay eggs, what do I do? Do they just die after laying eggs? Or I just feed them to my chickens too?
 
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The beetles (adults) don't eat the mealworms (the juveniles)--at least with the common mealworms (Tenebrio molitor). They never need be separated. The beetles lay eggs. The eggs hatch into tiny mealworms. Mealworms pupate. Pupae turn into beetles. The cycle continues. Raising mealworms really is much easier than you might think. The only thing you ever need do is add vegetable matter occasionally (if you forget a couple months, no biggie) and add wheat bran occasionally and very rarely, remove the accumulated dried vegetable matter (once a year or so). Just make sure to leave the beetles and the pupae alone. Once they reach the pupae stage, they are more valuable to perpetuate the colony than to use as food. If suddenly there doesn't seem to be anything alive in your colony, feed it and check again in a couple weeks. The great thing about them is they require so little care.
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I talked to my husband about raising the meal worms and he looked at me like I lost my marbles. I wonder if I can talk him into it. lol:p
 

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