Critter's Worm Farm


There’s Pleasure and Profit 
in Raising Earthworms

Whether you plan to raise
earthworms such as Red Wigglers or our domesticated
nightcrawlers on a small scale for personal use (such as
fishing bait or feeding your herps, pond or aquarium fish),
or whether you are concerned with a part-time or full-time
money-making-project, you’ll find it a fascinating as well
as a profitable endeavor.

It costs so little to start,
requires so little time and effort and pays so well, once
you’ve developed it to a selling stage, it is really one of
the best home-money-making projects of which we know. A
part-time earthworm business may be built to imposing
proportions within the limits of a basement, garage or city
lot…or it may be expanded into a profitable full-time
business if properly managed and promoted.

Almost anyone
can raise our domesticated nightcrawlers or Red Wiggler
earthworms successfully…men, women and youngsters, or even
handicapped persons. It’s an excellent retirement project
for elderly persons who want to keep busy and supplement
Social Security, pension or other income. Many of the most
successful earthworm hatcheries are owned and operated by
women.

Our special domesticated nightcrawlers and Red
Wiggler earthworms are amazingly prolific breeders. A
thousand mature breeders, properly cared for and allowed to
multiply, may give you half a million or more breeders,
growing earthworms and egg capsules within a year.

So that
you may begin to sell in volume during the season following
your start, it is advisable to begin with as many Red
Wiggler and European Nightcrawler breeders as you can
conveniently handle. The development of your project will
seem slow for the first two or three months, but don’t be
impatient. Soon thereafter it will begin to pyramid rapidly.
Don’t begin to sell too soon because you won’t want to sell
too many of your breeders at this stage, but after six to
nine months your pits or bins should be well-stocked and you
will be able within a short time to realize many times your
initial investment.

You may, if you choose, adopt two
stages in getting your earthworm project under way. The
first is the "propagation box" stage in which you "plant"
your initial stock of breeders in small boxes such as
ammunition boxes, fruit or vegetable crates or plastic
containers such as those made by Rubbermaid, with each box
capable of supporting some 500 breeders.

The second stage,
which may begin any time from three to six months later (or
whenever the propagation set-up becomes unwieldy) involves
the transfer of breeders, young worms and capsules to indoor
or outdoor culture beds, each large enough to support up to
10,000 or more mature breeders or bait-size worms.



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