Great for initial composting.
Great for a composting toilet !!! hey?!
chickens, fish, etc love the larvae.
BSF (Black Soldier Fly) keep other flies away.
Adult BSF have no mouth parts, do not bite or eat, just breed.
They eat meat, earthworms don't.
As i understand it, you can mix them with earthworms just fine.
Easy to start, only a 5 gallon bucket needed tilted at a 30 degree angle
to allow self harvesting of mature larvae .
[A square bucket is MUCH better if you have one]
(believe me, this is all you need .. you can make it much more complex!!)
Some how these suckers don't drown in a soupy mix of garbage, i don't know but mine seem to do ok..
i mention the drowning due to all containers i've seen have drain holes
which i have found isn't required... i might try a drain hole if i get a need
to have more than one bucket.
So, next to nothing has to be done compared to earthworms...
Don't know how good the end resulting poo is for growing plants.
i've grown BSF for two summers now in a 5 gallon bucket.
Oh, initially you will not be able to tell if you have fly maggots or
BSF larvae because they are both white when small.
They get much bigger than maggots.
As they get bigger, they aren't white like maggots.
Don't worry about the fly maggots, they can't climb up and out of
a 30 degree slope and thus never mature.
Black Soldier Fly
Hermetia illucens - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Black Soldier Flies in Compost - Howard Garrett
google videos "black soldier fly"
Great for a composting toilet !!! hey?!
chickens, fish, etc love the larvae.
BSF (Black Soldier Fly) keep other flies away.
Adult BSF have no mouth parts, do not bite or eat, just breed.
They eat meat, earthworms don't.
As i understand it, you can mix them with earthworms just fine.
Easy to start, only a 5 gallon bucket needed tilted at a 30 degree angle
to allow self harvesting of mature larvae .
[A square bucket is MUCH better if you have one]
(believe me, this is all you need .. you can make it much more complex!!)
Some how these suckers don't drown in a soupy mix of garbage, i don't know but mine seem to do ok..
i mention the drowning due to all containers i've seen have drain holes
which i have found isn't required... i might try a drain hole if i get a need
to have more than one bucket.
So, next to nothing has to be done compared to earthworms...
Don't know how good the end resulting poo is for growing plants.
i've grown BSF for two summers now in a 5 gallon bucket.
Oh, initially you will not be able to tell if you have fly maggots or
BSF larvae because they are both white when small.
They get much bigger than maggots.
As they get bigger, they aren't white like maggots.
Don't worry about the fly maggots, they can't climb up and out of
a 30 degree slope and thus never mature.
Black Soldier Fly
Hermetia illucens - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Black Soldier Flies in Compost - Howard Garrett
google videos "black soldier fly"
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