Think worms are gross? Think again—your garden will love them! 🪱 Discover how a 10-minute soil layering trick using vermicomposting can turn scraps into nutrient-packed plant fuel. Boost your harvest naturally and skip the pricey fertilizers.
👉 Watch now and learn how old-school gardening builds real results!

💼 Brought to you by Ancestry Lands – where we teach financial freedom through land ownership.
📘 Getting Dollars from Dirt: A Beginner’s Guide to Vacant Land Investing – available now.

🌐 Follow us @AncestryLands | ancestrylands.com | #LandOwnership #WealthMindset #DollarsFromDirt

What I wish I knew as a new gardener isn’t in fancy fertilizer ads. It’s in what pioneers did centuries ago, and it starts with worms. Here’s the secret. Layering your garden beds with the help of worms can transform your soil into a nutrient superfood. It’s called vermiculture. Old school, but crazy effective. All you need is a few layers. rocks or gravel at the bottom for drainage, a bit of sand. Then damp Pete moss or leaf litter, some green kitchen scraps or grass clippings, a little manure, and finally a layer of dry leaves. Sprinkle in some red worms. Yep, the kind you bait a hook with. And keep everything moist. The worms get right to work breaking down all those layers, turning scraps into plant superfuel, and leaving behind nutrient-rich tailings. You can set this up in a compost heap right in your garden or even make a potent compost tea for your potted plants. Honestly, this ancient method is a gardener’s cheat code. Try it once and you’ll never look at garden scraps or worms the same way

1 Comment

Pin