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🪱 Turn Waste into Wonder – Compost Like a Pro!
The VermiHut 5-Tray Worm Compost Bin is a compact, stackable system designed for efficient indoor or outdoor vermicomposting. Featuring superior airflow, moisture control, and a free worm-saver tray, it processes up to 5 lbs of food scraps daily into rich organic fertilizer. Made from durable HDPE, it offers odorless, low-maintenance composting ideal for eco-conscious professionals seeking sustainable waste solutions.
| ASIN | B018RU0BAS |
| Best Sellers Rank | #141,351 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ( See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ) #106 in Outdoor Composting Bins |
| Brand | VermiHut |
| Brand Name | VermiHut |
| Capacity | 50 Liters |
| Color | Dark Green |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 792 Reviews |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 16"L x 16"W x 27.5"H |
| Manufacturer | VermiTek |
| Material | HDPE |
| Material Type | HDPE |
| Product Dimensions | 16"L x 16"W x 27.5"H |
| Shape | Rectangular |
| UPC | 714119421297 |
L**C
Good product. Excellent Customer Service. Best value worm farm on Amazon
I started worm farming using a DIY 5 gallon bucket with instructions from youtube videos. Using the Vermitek worm farm brings my hobby to another level. I had the Vermitek worm farm for about a month. I am completely satisfied with the quality of the product. My sister has a competitor product and the Veritek bins are much sturdier. The instruction manual is well written with lots of good tips. IMHO this is simply the best value worm farm on Amazon. There's a lot to love using the Vermitek product vs. a 5 gallon bucket: 1) There is so much more surface space using the bins 2) With not much more vertical space I can have 5x more worms vs. a single 5 gallon bucket. 3) The Vermitek worm farm looks so much better than a bucket with random drilled holes! 4) It is so much more convenient and much cleaner to work with the worm bins. 5) Harvesting worm castings is so much easier with minimal amount of work with the Vermitek. See suggestions below. My order came with missing instruction manual. I found the vermitek web site and email the seller. I got a phone call from the seller the next day and got the instructions needed. Customer service was excellent! Talking to the seller I took the opportunity to purchase additional accessories from the seller's website. I guess the prices are so low for the accessories that the seller don't list them on Amazon. For example the coco coir mats are less than a dollar. Other accessories I found useful and I wish the seller would sell as a bundled extra: the plastic claw for moving worms castings around, extra coco coir brick, moisture and temperature meters. If you order extra worms from the seller you can easily get to having free shipping with their order minimum. Some suggestions using the Vermitek worm farm: 1. As others noted Fruit flies may be an issue with the unscreened holes in the top cover. However I had no issues with fruit flies by using a few layers of damp paper on top of the worms in the top bin. 2. I use a spray bottle to keep the worm farm damp but not wet. I only spray water on top of the layers of newspaper I use. The farm is never wet enough to have much "worm tea" drop to the bottom spigot bin. 3. For the worm food when adding "greens" (vegetable scrapes etc.) also add "browns" (damp newspaper, coco coir etc.). Your worms eats both plus a good ratio and greens and brown will keep your worm farm smelling fresh. 3. What I did to migrate worms to a new bin: instead of adding new bin with new bedding + food on top of the existing bin I added a new bin below the existing worm bin by using a coco coir mat. b) I moved some casting and worms (about a third to a half) from the existing bin and pushed them to one side of the new bin so that the top of the casting/worms from the new bin touches the bottom of the existing bin c) I had cut out a few pieces of scrap wood and use them as spacers to prop up the bin so that it sits evenly when the old bin is put on top of the new bin d) on this side of the new bin add worm food, more coco coir + damp newspaper and, move a few wigglers over to the side e) For the old bin, I pushed the worm casting + worms to the side touching the bottom bin side with casting. With this the worms will migrate (drop) down to the new bin leaving the old bin with just the worm casting. f) Continue to add new worm food just in the new bin only. I think this is easier way to move the worms to a new bin and harvest the casting especially if you are using a coco coir mat as a base for the new bin. I will take some photos next time I do this and will post them.
G**.
Put it Once, Use "Forever!"
This is an amazing "tool" for your garden. 1. Setup (5-star) : A. It is super easy to assemble. Just put the legged tray up on a level surface, cover with white strainer; layer over a cloth worm spearator; add a worm tray. DONE! B. Get some shreeded paper, wet it and layer it over the bottom of the worm tray. Get some worms and add them to the tray. (Weigh your worms first!). Add about the same weight of food scraps as you got worms. Cover with the top. C. Check periodically for the food layer to stay wet. Add food (Peferabbly milled down to smaller bits) weekly to one corner of the tray at a time. Check for "tea" collected in the bottom bin periodically. Collect the tea to dillute for your plants watering needs. D. Once tray is about 2/3rds full add your second tray on top and repeat step B, mind that worms will migrate into upper tray themselves, but you are welcome to relocate some by hand too! E. Once you are on your tray 3 or 4. check your bottom tray - it should be by now all black and more or less uniform or crumbly to be used as soild additive. Check to see if you have any worms left and throw them in the top tray if you do. Toss the new compost-soil to the garden/pots where it is needed. Sturdiness (4-star): As your compost bin fills up it becomes top heavy and the legs may spread out. So, just keep an eye out for water collection bin to be emptied regularily and for the soil (bottom worm bin to be emptied at least annually as well. 3. Easy to use (5-Star) Setup is super easy; use is super easy; maintenance - super easy; best of all - you got worms once and they will overwinter and re-appear in the spring! Happy Wormposting Everyone!
T**R
I love this thing so much, with some adjustments.
I do my vermicomposting a little differently than most, and it's helped me have a lot of success with this thing. I was harvesting the bottom tray every month, now it's become every two weeks. First off, what you need to consider about stacking-bin systems is that by the time you fill up the top tray, there is a LOT of weight on the bottom tray. That's no good for the bottom tray or anything except the top tray, because the compaction wrecks any chance you have of oxygenation in any tray but the top one, maybe the one underneath. The quick and easy solution to that is a spacer in all four corners, maybe two or three inches long. I use PVC because I don't care about plastics leaching out, I've got enough to worry about in my life. If you're worried, you can use wood blocks and replace them when they rot, that's fine with me. The important thing is that no tray gets compacted by the trays on top of them. Second thing I do for success; the bottom tray contains about two inches of dry peat. So does the top tray. These never get used for worms (and worms won't even try to enter the top tray, because it would kill them.) The bottom tray is to soak up any drippage that comes from the above trays. Sure, worm leachate is great, but you know what else is great? Not having to deal with stinky, anaerobic drippage. i've got a full time job and a worm bin in my kitchen. I only have so much time for worm-farm drama. Oh, and that top tray of dry peat? That's why I have zero fruit flies. Hey fruit flies, want to get at the old bananas and the watermelon rinds in my working tray? Well have fun burrowing through the two inches of dry peat on top. Oh, you can't, because you're fruit flies and you can't use tools? Sucks to be you. Be born with thumbs next life, you'll have an easier time. Final thing that works really well for me: I don't play with burying my scraps. I see youtube video after youtube video of people burying their scraps in a clockwise or counterclockwise method, digging through the half-rotten food and trying not to murder or freak out their worms while they're doing it. That's cool if that's what they like doing, but that just seems...difficult. And dirty. What I like to do is hydrate a little bucket of peat or coir, whatever I'm using for bedding, the week before I feed. All the vegetable scraps, tea leaves, and coffee grounds get tossed in a bucket throughout the week, and when I feed, I dump a little pile in one spot in the bin. Then I grab a couple handful of peat that's about the consistency of potting soil, and use it to cover the pile I just dumped. Repeat weekly. It means I don't have to dig through anything, ever. When three bins are full, I harvest the bottom one (not the peat one, that never moves--the one above it.). Also, when it comes to harvest, I don't like to murder worms who were too dumb to leave the poo-bin, but I'm also not gonna cook them a steak and give them a backrub while I meticulously hand-sort them from the poo. So the way I harvest is to take the peat-bin off with the lid, put it aside. Then put the harvest bin up on top, fluff it up so it's easy for stragglers to run down, and start harvesting handfuls from the top. Since the worms hate light, they run for the bottom, and by the time I get it all out of the bin, they've disappeared into the bin below it, and I don't have to play around with them. That's about all I have to offer, tip-wise. Anyway, point is, this bin makes me so happy. It never stinks and it produces a lot. I bought it in April and I've had a good time with it.
J**E
Works great!
My worms arrived first and I tossed them in the tote of compostables I had been collecting. That was mistake #1. Mistake #2 was rehydrating the entire block of coco coir, should have done half. What ended up happening was that I had to start 2 bins instead of one to accommodate all of the filler. It's been about two months now since I set up my worm farm. I have been adding all of my kitchen and plant scraps in that time. I just had to set up a third bin this week because the top bin was getting full. It took a day or so for the worms to migrate up but they are now working the top bin. At this point they are still finishing up the scraps in the middle bin. The bottom bin looks like it is nothing but castings. From the looks of it, I think the worms separate themselves out of the castings by working their way up the bins. I will edit this if necessary when I remove the bottom bin to start using the castings. I didn't use the cloth that came with it, I did put a piece of newspaper on the very bottom as per the directions. I have only found a couple of worms on the white plastic bit that goes at the very bottom, none have made it into the reservoir. We'll see what happens when the bottom bin doesn't have a sheet of newspaper across it's grate. Overall this has been a great purchase and I would recommend it.
K**N
Love my VermiHut! No stink! Definitely recommend!
I bought this particular bin for 2 reasons. 1) It was one of the cheaper priced worm composters 2) It had 5 trays so I knew I would have room to grow into it. I am not disappointed in my purchase at all! It came a few days later than the original ETA which stressed me out a little because the worms ended up coming early so I didn't have a home for them for 24 hours. This hut was so easy to put together and the little manual that comes with it is perfect and extremely useful. Although, the manual states that it comes with a coconut fibre mat, mine did not which is fine, I just covered the bed with wet newspaper. I put it together as instructed and it has you put the drain cloth over the drain bin before setting in the first tray. I don't particularly like the cloth hanging over the bin but I highly recommend it. I have lifted the tray a couple of times and have found tons of worms in the drain cloth. They would normally end up in the drain bin and possible the drain spigot so this cloth has kept them from clogging things up downstairs. I followed this instruction in the manual of using the coconut coir, shredding newspaper, and adding compost for the worms to start their bed. However, when feeding them, I put food in one corner instead of all over the bin. This helps me check how much food is actually being composted and how quickly. When they are nearly done with one corner I move onto another corner. Saw this in a couple of YouTube videos so that is where I got the idea. ***Important note - If you use your normal paper shredder to shred your newspaper, make sure your shredder blades are completely cleaned of any other debris. I didn't check and ended up with strips of plastic from junk mail and windowed envelopes so I periodically pick these out of the composter. Would hate for my worms to choke on plastic! I keep the bin in my kitchen and there is absolutely no foul smells coming from the hut and my two big dogs don't even pay attention to it. I enjoy having it close by so I can check on them and see how things are progressing. Depending on how things go, I may buy another hut in the future and would definitely get the same one. My only wish is that this hut came with a trowel/rake so that I could move the worms and compost around inside. I am too scared for now to touch the worms and have been using a fork to maneuver things. I'll be buying a plastic one soon so I recommend you do as well when making this purchase. - Katherine
K**R
Fabulous, well-designed, comfy home for your worms.
I have built several worm bins in the past, but due to our sometimes freezing winters and hot sweltering summers, I wanted a better bin for indoors. The current bin I have was getting way too hot (120 F!). I got tired of my worms constantly escaping and having to adjust it every day. I saw this bin and was impressed with the design, looks and reasonable price. It fits nicely in my laundry room out of the way. Very easy to use and my worms are comfy. No more mass exodus from the bin, no smell and no fruit flies or other unwanted insects. One tip I learned from YouTube, always keep a top tray with just dry paper or cardboard shreds. This prevents fruit flies, and being dry, the worms stay out of this upper layer. Haven't had very long, but have already harvested one tray full of beautiful compost. Customer service was excellent. They called me before shipping to let me know they were out of the dark green color and to ask if I wanted to wait or choose another color (got the terra cotta - very attractive). Rep was friendly and knowledgeable about the product. I told him about my overheating bin, and he got this unit out to me in super fast time. I like this so much, I'm considering buying another.
L**L
Practical use
The idea is great, but I had to make a lot of adjustments: put fine mesh liner on the bottom of each tray, glue mesh on vent holes, add sturdy support/lift for each tray, otherwise when you stack them, they go all the way down, and smesh everything including your worms into a flat pancake, especially the bottom trays. I used 4 2” sturdy pots upside down in the corners of each tray as a support for each next tray. I also made a worm farm with just two large bins, drilling holes for drain and vent in one and stacking it inside the other one. This simple large homemade worm farm works a lots better, and a lot easier to use, I don’t have to mess with the small trays, I can even soak large cardboard and feed it to the worms.
L**I
... bin for over two months now and it works great. It was very easy to assemble and it ...
I’ve been using this compost bin for over two months now and it works great. It was very easy to assemble and it looks like it’s built to last. I have it in my living room and odor has not been a problem. A few days after I put in some fresh greens, I smell a little odor only when I open the lid but that disappears when they get decomposed. I have not had problems with insects or bugs. To keep them away, I put a netting under the first bin and on top of the highest tray being used, I also put dry newspaper to cover the compost. We had mice in the past before I got the bin so in case they come back, I placed the unused trays on top to prevent them from getting in. I generate a lot of kitchen green waste all at once so I also use my outdoor composter. I’ve only used two trays but I could start using the other ones as the first tray is almost all compost. So far, it has only produced very little liquid on the bottom, not enough to get collected in the bottom base tray. I read that worms need eggshell to help them digest so I ground up the shells in my blender ( instead of just crushing them by hand and) also to remove the protein. Overall, I’m very satisfied with the product. I like the idea of producing compost that is ready to use.
TrustPilot
1天前
1 周前