Composting 101
TOP RATED
Education
Reducing waste and helping the environment, one little worm at a time!
Join us to discover the basics of vermicomposting, or composting using worms. Learn how one little box of worms can turn old food scraps from landfill waste into rich, nourishing natural fertilizer. Homeowners and apartment-dwellers alike are invited to attend this workshop and see how worm composting can fit into many different lifestyles, and even the smallest of kitchens.
You'll learn about feeding, maintaining, and harvesting compost from your new worm bin. We'll provide all materials for participants to assemble and take home their starter bins--worms included!
All ages welcome
All materials for making vermicompost bins
Cancellation Policy
We are the urban gateway to nature and science
History:
The Chicago Academy of Sciences was founded in 1857 as Chicago’s first museum, dedicated to the preservation and display of native specimens. Today the Academy’s collection, due to its age and type, places it among the most important in the world. In 1999, the Academy opened the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum in Lincoln Park. It has welcomed more than 1.5 million visitors and is a unique venue for the public, especially urban dwellers, to find new ways to reconnect with the natural world.
Mission:
Our mission is to create a positive relationship between people and nature through collaborations, education, research and collections, exhibits and public forums that fosters urban connections to our region’s nature and science.
What We Do:
The Museum provides award-winning exhibitions and programs to 70,000 students annually and trains and provides resources for more than 2,000 Chicago teachers. The Nature Museum is one of the city’s best examples of eco-friendly building technology, including a green roof, solar panels, natural light sources and native landscaping. The Academy and its Museum are engaged in important conservation and research work, such as its Butterfly Restoration Project.