Search Results for: silkworms

When to hatch silkworms

New mulberry leaves

When’s the best time to
start
silkworm eggs?  Probably about
two weeks ago, although I only pulled mine out of the fridge on May 8.



Silkworm eggs

The trick is to time
your hatch for a period when there are plenty of young mulberry leaves
around, and for the sake of safety, you probably should also work
around the
frost-free
date
.  It would
be a shame to get baby silkworms going, only to have a frost nip back
the leaves so you end up without a food source.



Mulberry twig

What I forgot to factor
into my calculations is that it takes about two weeks for silkworm eggs
to hatch after you take them out of cold storage and put them in a dish
at room temperature.  So we’ll be getting a slightly late start
this year, but it shouldn’t be a big deal.  I’ll report more once
we have little white caterpillars crawling around.



Our chicken waterer keeps hens healthy with
POOP-free water while they wait for their caterpillar treats.

Is it efficient to raise chickens on silkworms

Silkworm mothIn my
last post
, I wrote
that I wasn’t sure how many silkworms you could raise on a single
mulberry tree, and that got me wondering whether chickens fed silkworms
would use land more or less efficiently than those fed corn and
soybeans.  I don’t expect to be feeding our flock solely on
silkworms any time soon, but it’s an interesting thought-problem when
trying to decide how much space to commit to mulberries.




The hardest part of my
calculation was guessing how many silkworms a hen would have to eat in
a day if they provided her sole ration.  I couldn’t find any data
on nutritional value of silkworms at the two-inch stage, so I used
information for the less palatable pupae, which clock in at 2,881
calories per dry pound.  Using a lot of rough figures, I came up
with a chicken needing 33 two-inch silkworms per day, or about 12,045
per year.  (Silkworms would really only be grown during the
summer, but presumably you could freeze or dry them for the winter.)




Coppiced mulberryIf you’re raising mulberries
to be fed to silkworms, you don’t generally let the plants turn into
trees.  Instead, you space the plants two feet apart in all
directions and
coppice
repeatedly, getting perhaps 16 tons of fresh leaves per acre, which
might be enough to feed 640,000 silkworms per acre per year. 
Another figure is less optimistic and suggests you may only get 160,000
silkworms per acre per year.



Depending on which
figure you use, you could raise 13 to 53 chickens on the silkworms from
one acre of mulberries processed by silkworms.  In contrast,
Gene
Logsdon suggests you can keep one chicken going for a year on a bushel
of grain
, and you
can grow about 40 bushels of wheat on an acre
.  So it’s conceivable
that silkworms could be comparable to grain…if you don’t mind the
work of hauling mulberry leaves to your insects two or three times a
day.




Silk hope mulberryOf course, this is just a
thought problem.  On a diversified homestead, it makes sense to
coppice the mulberries more lightly so the bushes provide fruits as
well as silkworms, in which case you should expect to get enough leaves
for only about 15 to 30 silkworms from each bush.  (A mature tree,
on the other hand, is reported to feed about 100 silkworms.) 
Clearly, I’ll be a bit hard-pressed to come up with enough leaves to
feed the offspring of my 200 silkworm eggs this year since I’ve only
got one hefty and two puny mulberry trees in the ground so far. 
So, I let Mark talk me into adding two new varieties to our collection:

  • Oscar’s Mulberry (Morus alba)
    — Edible in the red stage when they have a raspberry-like flavor, or
    in the black stage when they are among the finest flavored of hardy
    mulberries.  Very early ripening.  Zone 5-9.
  • Silk Hope Mulberry (Morus alba
    x M. rubra) — Similar to
    Illinois Everbearing, but superior in size and flavor.  Excellent
    quality with a long fruiting season.  Widely adapted, tolerates
    drought or high humidity.  North Carolina selection by A. J.
    Bullard.  Zone 5-9.

If silkworms turn out to
be as good a fit for our homestead as I’m hoping, we should be able to
ramp up production dramatically in a year or two.  Thanks for
bearing with my flights of fancy in the meantime!



Our chicken waterer rounds out a healthy chicken
diet with clean water.

How to raise silkworms

Silkworm closeup

In a previous post, I
wrote about the potential of
feeding
silkworms to chickens

But how do you raise them?




Holding silkwormsAlthough you can buy
commercial feed for silkworms, those who want to create a sustainable
system will first need to plant or track down a mulberry tree. 
Silkworms don’t eat as adults, and the caterpillars live entirely on
fresh mulberry leaves, preferably white or black mulberries.  I
haven’t found information on how many silkworms you can raise on the
leaves of one tree without damaging it, so I’ll have to report on that
after a season of experimentation.  In the meantime, I’ve scoped
out a few additional sources to supplement my young
Illinois
everbearing mulberry

if I run short.




Silkworm life cycleYour next step is to find a
source of silkworm eggs.  There are several different varieties of
silkworms, but I’ve opted to buy so-called Peace Silkworms since the
adults of this variety are able to break free of their cocoons and
breed naturally.  Many other varieties have been bred to optimize
silk-production and have such thick cocoons that the adults perish
inside.  I’m going to try out
Aurora Silk, where you can buy 200
silkworm eggs for $30 with free shipping.




Once your eggs arrive,
you can keep them in a ziplock bag in the fridge for up to a few months
to delay hatch.  When your mulberry tree is well leafed out, take
the eggs out of the fridge and leave them at room temperature in a box
or on a tray.  It should take about a week for your eggs to hatch,
and you’ll know they’re nearly there when you see dark rings forming on
the eggs.  Just before the eggs hatch, layer some mulberry leaves
underneath for the caterpillars to eat, then put a clear lid with some
air holes on your tray to hold moisture in the leaves without
suffocating your insects.




Silkworms on mulberriesSilkworms are voracious
eaters of mulberry leaves, with various sources recommending topping
off their feed once to three times per day.  When you do so, be
sure to supply fresh mulberry leaves with no water on them — young
caterpillars, especially, can drown in drops of dew.  Every other
day or so, clean out the old leaves (perhaps using mesh trays so that
the caterpillars can crawl up into the fresh leaves without your help).




Chickens are supposed to
like silkworms best when they’re less than two inches long, but the
insects will keep growing up to three inches.  At that size, about
one month after hatching, the
Harvesting mulberry leavessilkworms stop eating and
turn yellow — your cue that they’re ready to move on to the pupation
phase.  Take out any remaining mulberry leaves and place the
bottom half of a egg carton in the silkworm habitat, providing about
one egg cup per caterpillar.  It’s best to try to save at least
twenty caterpillars to reach this stage if you want to keep the cycle
going.




Within three days, the
silkworms should have spun cocoons, and three weeks later they will
emerge as flight-less moths.  Provide paper towels or another type
of bedding and the female moths will mate and then lay 200 to 500 eggs
apiece.  If you want to raise another batch right away, just put
the eggs in a container and wait for them to hatch in a week, or move
them to the fridge to store until the mulberry leaves are flush again.



The Avian Aqua Miser is an automatic chicken
waterer that makes chicken care so easy you have time to raise
silkworms.