Kikiriki
Songster
My son-in-law and daughter lived by a lake for a while and loved to fish so I made them a worm bin. Took a very large nursery pot - the type that trees come in. A large black trash can lid fit right on top of it to keep the worms in. I put screen mesh in the bottom to keep soil and worms in. Filled it with compost, shredded newspaper, dirt. Then dug a hole the size of the pot in their backyard [the hardest part, had my son do it]. Put it in a spot that got afternoon shade. Put some small rocks in the bottom of the hole for drainage and then sunk the nursery pot into the hole. Went to the bait store and got several containers of bait worms and put them in the pot. A little oatmeal and garden trimmings were added and some water but not much. Put the top on and told them to "feed and water" the pot a few times a week.
Not scientific - I'd never done it before - and may not be the type of worms we'd want for chickens but it worked like a charm and he had bait worms all summer and fall. Don't know how they did over the winter as they moved from the house. Whoever moved in either had a great pot of compost or a bunch of worms sunk in the dirt!
Bothe if they were lucky! Even if the worms die, their cocoons will hatch when the weather warms up, I believe.