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#1
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I got a grindal worm culture from a friend about a week ago. All my
small fish love them. However, I'm reading conflicting info on how to culture them. I have potting soil and coconut fiber - are either of these suitable or do I have to buy peat? How moist should I keep the culture? Also, the guy I got them from recommends rotting peanuts as food, but I keep seeing oatmeal on the web. Is there a preferred food? -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#2
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Altum wrote:
I got a grindal worm culture from a friend about a week ago. All my small fish love them. However, I'm reading conflicting info on how to culture them. I have potting soil and coconut fiber - are either of these suitable or do I have to buy peat? How moist should I keep the culture? Also, the guy I got them from recommends rotting peanuts as food, but I keep seeing oatmeal on the web. Is there a preferred food? Never mind. Thanks, Richard! http://killi.net/feeding/live/cultured/worms/grindal/ -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#3
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Altum wrote,
Never mind. Thanks, Richard! http://killi.net/feeding/live/cultured/worms/grindal/ ......... I found potting compost to work great. 2"s of compost - 1" of water from your aquarium (dechlorinated), wet *all* compost. To much water will kill the culture. If the glass is cut within 1/4" of the shoe box sides, the worms will crawl up onto the glass and can be harvested daily. I used powdered oatmeat for babys and fed daily a small amount (under the glass)........ Frank |
#4
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Frank wrote:
Altum wrote, Never mind. Thanks, Richard! http://killi.net/feeding/live/cultured/worms/grindal/ ......... I found potting compost to work great. 2"s of compost - 1" of water from your aquarium (dechlorinated), wet *all* compost. To much water will kill the culture. If the glass is cut within 1/4" of the shoe box sides, the worms will crawl up onto the glass and can be harvested daily. I used powdered oatmeat for babys and fed daily a small amount (under the glass)........ Frank Thanks, Frank. I've got to figure out where to buy the glass. I think I'm going to go to a craft store and get a cheap picture frame. My fish love the worms - especially the betta and Pachypanchax. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#5
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Hi..
[Grindal] Their main enemy is a tiny black *wasp* that sting the worms and lay its eggs in(to) the worms and its larvae eat the worms up. There are a lot of these tiny parasitic wasp species, each seem to prefer special prey. Some hunt plant lice, some other little beetles/beetle larvae that destroy wood/trees some other worms or insects.. Take some extra fine gauze or cotton fabric and an elastic band, cover the worm pot with that cotton, close it with the band and open it only for feeding or harvest. A single wasp is able to kill a worm culture. My fish love the worms - especially the betta and Pachypanchax. Absolutely. I guess they must have a sweet taste. :-) HTH. -- cu Marco |
#6
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In article ,
Altum wrote: I got a grindal worm culture from a friend about a week ago. All my small fish love them. However, I'm reading conflicting info on how to culture them. I have potting soil and coconut fiber - are either of these suitable or do I have to buy peat? How moist should I keep the culture? Also, the guy I got them from recommends rotting peanuts as food, but I keep seeing oatmeal on the web. Is there a preferred food? See also http://killi.net/feeding/live/cultured/worms/grindal/ Grindals are much much trickier then white worms which are as near foolproof as possible. But, they don't mind room temperature, which will kill white worms anywhere outside of a British home without central heating. The best food for grindals I ever found is "Gerbers high protein baby cereal". I was able to find this in California, but nowhere else. Regular baby cereal wil work. Allegedly soy flour works although I found it did nothing more than make a putrid stinking mess. Rotting peanuts are to be avoided like the plague for they grow a mould which has highly toxic and carcinogenic aflotoxins (sp?). I used a plastic shoe box with about 2" of a mixture of peat moss and well composted manure bought in a bag at the store. Black earth works as well as manure. Too wet and the culture will stink like hell. Too dry and they dry up and die. It should be fairly moist, but no puddles should be visible. When new, the peat will absorb a tremendous amount of water, so keep that in mind. After a few days it settles down. As soon as one culture is going well, start another. I found I had to have about 4 cultures going at once to guarentee I always had enough food for a decent number of fish. At any point in time one culture was always, um, "not doing well". The cultures should be covered to prevent evaportive loss. Inevitably they culture wull attract gnats, tiny flies. Harmless but damn annoying. Apparanly they can be killed by leaving the cover off for an hour so the worms all bury themseves, then taking a propane torch and searing the gnats into insect heaven. Hide them someplace away from family members. You'll never forget the stink of a sour grindal culture as the vapours from 10,000 rotting worm corpses decompose. But, they are worth the trouble. Some larger fish (Blue Gularis) can take them upon hatching, and they're a practical food for any fish up to a few inches. They can also be gut-loaded with things like pureed carrot or spirulina powder or what have you. -- Need Mercedes parts? http://parts.mbz.org Richard Sexton | Mercedes stuff: http://mbz.org 1970 280SE, 72 280SE | Home pages: http://rs79.vrx.net 633CSi 250SE/C 300SD | http://aquaria.net http://killi.net |
#7
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Richard Sexton wrote:
In article , Altum wrote: I got a grindal worm culture from a friend about a week ago. All my small fish love them. However, I'm reading conflicting info on how to culture them. I have potting soil and coconut fiber - are either of these suitable or do I have to buy peat? How moist should I keep the culture? Also, the guy I got them from recommends rotting peanuts as food, but I keep seeing oatmeal on the web. Is there a preferred food? See also http://killi.net/feeding/live/cultured/worms/grindal/ Found that, 10 minutes after I wrote the post. Grindals are much much trickier then white worms which are as near foolproof as possible. But, they don't mind room temperature, which will kill white worms anywhere outside of a British home without central heating. Yeah. And I'm in a warm climate with no air conditioning. White worms ain't going to happen here. The best food for grindals I ever found is "Gerbers high protein baby cereal". I was able to find this in California, but nowhere else. Regular baby cereal wil work. Allegedly soy flour works although I found it did nothing more than make a putrid stinking mess. Rotting peanuts are to be avoided like the plague for they grow a mould which has highly toxic and carcinogenic aflotoxins (sp?). I didn't even think of that. I'll have to tell the guy who gave me the culture to switch to baby food. It would be a bummer to kill off my fish with aflatoxins. snip But, they are worth the trouble. Some larger fish (Blue Gularis) can take them upon hatching, and they're a practical food for any fish up to a few inches. The only fish that probably need something more substantial are my angelfish and the M. altispinosa, and even those love the grindals. One of my bettas hasn't figured out that they're food yet, but I'm sure he'll come around. They can also be gut-loaded with things like pureed carrot or spirulina powder or what have you. Gut loading! Very cool. I'll have to grab some powdered spirulina. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
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