I hear you! I wouldn't be eating any insects and not fond of gathering them for my bearded dragons...lol..the things we do for our fuzzy, scaled, and feathered babiesYuck!
lol! I’ll stick to feeding them to my rabbits and ducks and then eat them!
hmm, I have considered it... it is too cold here for them to overwinter, but how do they self harvest?For those who have chickens, other fowl, reptiles, or fish or for those who want to increase throughput on compost. The black soldier fly larvae are pretty awesome. Good fat, protein, and mineral sources they eat ALL your kitchen scrap including that which you would normally not put in the compost. They self harvest making them easy to feed to your animals. Use the "tea" to fertilize flowers etc, put the "mass" in the compost as a feeder for bacteria there. Let them get into your compost pile and watch it digest quickly. While they are not suited for eating cellulose directly, they will thrive there and eat the bacteria reduced cellulose. They don't survive the winter well in cooler climes (Delaware is too cold) so you have to import them annually, but they are sooooo cheap.
OMG. this would be too much fun to watch. I can just picture the duck waiting expectantly by the exit...If growing BSFL solely for chickens or fish, you need only position the exit so they fall into the yard/tank.
You read my mind...thanks! I have looked at them before and they seemed like a lot of trouble but I am at a different point now and I should revisit the topic.Here is a great starting point for BSFL, Living Web Farms Black Soldier Fly Production Part 1 Introduction
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