Starting a BSFL Frass Farm from Scratch: What I'd Tell Someone with Land and a Budget
Starting a BSFL frass farm requires four things in the right order: a controlled environment, reliable heat, quality feedstock, and adequate breeding light. ...
Science-backed guides on Black Soldier Fly Larvae farming, composting, and live feed for chickens and reptiles. Written by Travis at Blue Grub Farms.
Starting a BSFL frass farm requires four things in the right order: a controlled environment, reliable heat, quality feedstock, and adequate breeding light. ...
BSFL have a Ca:P ratio up to 8:1 — far better than mealworms or crickets for bearded dragons. Feeding guide, nutrition breakdown, and how to raise your own.
Learn how to start a Black Soldier Fly Larvae colony at home. Covers bin setup, breeding cage, temperature, humidity, feeding, and common problems to avoid.
The Blue Grub Farms BSFL Bin Kit converts a standard tote into a working Black Soldier Fly colony with self-harvesting. Everything beginners need, one kit.
BSFL eat fruit scraps, coffee grounds, eggshells, and grains. Learn what to feed your colony, what to avoid, and how diet affects larval nutrition.
BSFL, crickets, and mealworms compared on Ca:P ratio, protein, fat, and ease of home production. Find out which feeder insect is best for your reptile.
Black Soldier Fly Larvae are efficient composters and nutritious feeder insects. Learn what BSFL are, their lifecycle, and why reptile owners raise them.
BSFL are nutritionally impressive, approved for human consumption in the EU, but not yet FDA-approved in the US. Here's the honest breakdown.
There's real research on BSFL and plastic degradation, but the results are more nuanced than the headlines suggest. Here's what scientists have actually found.
BSFL can break down dog and cat waste, but pathogen safety requires more than just larvae. Here's the honest picture on pet waste bioconversion.
BSFL can reduce organic waste by 50 to 75% and convert a meaningful percentage into their own biomass. Here's what the research says, and what it looks like ...
Birds, rodents, mites, ants, and competing flies can all hit your colony hard. Here's how to identify what's getting into your bin and what actually works to...