I went out to get the paper a few days ago and saw a wonderful sight. There was a worm in the driveway after an evening’s rain. That’s a good sign. That means spring is not far away when lawns and gardens will teem with worms.
I have always had an affinity for worms, dating back to the days when my dad and I went down to the creek bottom behind our house to dig them for bait. When I had a paper route as a 12-year old, I would frequently stop and pick up night crawlers in the street and put them back in the grass where they would have a chance to survive.
In winter, worms burrow deep in the earth, up to a foot, to escape the extreme cold. Then, as the days grow longer and the temperatures begin to warm a little, worms emerge from the depths to feed and mate.
Earthworms are hermaphrodites – each individual carries both male and female sex organs. They lack both an internal skeleton and an exoskeleton, but maintain their structure with fluid-filled coelom chambers that function as a hydrostatic skeleton.
This is also interesting: Worms don’t have actual eyes but can see through special photosensitive cells. I remember as a boy when we tried to catch night crawlers at night, if you made a sudden move, they retreated instantly back into their holes. Those photosensitive eyes were extra acute.
Because I put a load of horse manure in my garden year before last, my garden is now full of worms. They love any organic matter and manure is exactly that.
Worms are underground engineers. They literally force air though tunnels as they move. This aerates the soil and mixes the compounds. Worms are vital to all forms of agriculture.
In 1881 Charles Darwin wrote this: “It may be doubted whether there are many other animals which have played so important a part in the history of the world, as have these lowly organized creatures.”
Fish like worms; robins like worms; gardeners like worms. When it comes to these useful and productive creatures, what’s not to like?