You can't totally liquefy it, but you can make it into a usable tea for fertilizing plants. This works with composted cow manure as well. Take about 2-3 cups of the dry material and put it into a plastic gallon jug with a screw on lid and fill it with water to the halfway point. put the lid on it and shake till the castings are broken up into smaller pieces and the water turns dark. When done, fill the jug to the top and use this for feeding indoor and outdoor plants. This is similar to "compost tea" that many gardeners refer to. They just use compost instead of castings.
Try alamedamagazine.com, or bayworms.org. I just bought worm castings from Bay Worms and my garden looks absolutely fabulous! They are the cheapest that I have found in the Bay Area. I will never buy worm castings from anyone else.
Helium
Crystallines can liquefy under pressure if it is sufficiently high. Generally the opposite happens where they become more dense and compressed as the pressure increases.
The critical temperature of a gas is the temperature at or above which no amount of pressure, however great, will cause the gas to liquefy.
Other words for melt are thaw, defrost, liquefy, and dissolve.
Some do and break the mass down
Vermicast , worm manure, worm humus, or worm castings.
Try alamedamagazine.com, or bayworms.org. I just bought worm castings from Bay Worms and my garden looks absolutely fabulous! They are the cheapest that I have found in the Bay Area. I will never buy worm castings from anyone else.
The weight of this product is approximately 3 pounds. When you are creating an organic garden these worm castings can really go a long way in helping you.
The collective noun for worms is either a knot or a Bryce.
Worm compost is the absolute best in the world. Worm castings (poo) have all the microbes and bacteria that support the soil.
In a worm farm, worms eat the food and kitchen scraps that would otherwise go to landfill. They produce "castings", or worm poo, which is an excellent plant food for your garden. Their urine also drains off at the bottom and can be diluted with 10 parts of water for a terrific plant fertilizer. The castings and urine have no smell.
Worm Poo...or castings is used as a rich fertiliser for soil. The worm castings are rich in soluble plant nutrients and growth enhancing compounds as well as containing an increased amount of microbial life. Used as is or mixed with existing soil, using "worm Poo" you will see a significant increase in plant growth and health. Plus it is good for the environment........
This depends on the type of compost and the moisture level of it. It can be anything between 300 grams and 600 grams. Worm compost or worm castings will be heavier.
"Worm poop," or worm castings, look like little pellets of soil, which is basically what they are. If you are talking about dried blood, which is used as a fertilizer, it's a black substance.
Red wrigglers are the kind of worm that makes the most compost. The decomposer in question (Eisenia fetida) produces a lot of castings from breaking down compostable materials in vermicomposting bins.
Who gives a Casting what's in it?!?!?!? ha I said "casting", ha, instead of crap,ha ha ha!