I work at a farm that produces live feed, mostly for pet stores and zoos. I've been working there full-time for a year-ish, amd I have experience with the production of Tenebrio spp. (mealworm beetles), Galleria spp. (waxworm moths), and Acheta spp. (house crickets). This includes every stage of the life cycle: egg + larva + pupa + adult for the "worms", and egg + nymph + adult for the crickets. The "worms" are sold as larvae for optimum nutritional value and trophic return-on-input, whereas the crickets are sold as adults. My job is one of the "dirty jobs" at the farm. Well, everyone's job there is dirty, but I'm one of the ones scooping feed, breathing clouds of bug shit, handling the product and sometimes having it crawl all over us, being swarmed by moths and beetles and flies, and dodging cockroaches. It's not as terrible as it might sound but it's definitely not clean.
This is a throwaway account that I'll be checking as much as I can today and tomorrow and maybe Monday too. I do not do push notifications or phone notifications and I'm not extremely online enough to respond to everything within 5 minutes, but I'll be logged on at least once an hour for this today. I will respond to every single question if I can, it just might take awhile. If you know or have an inkling of what my main is, shh, plz dun dox. After this AMA is complete I may abandon this account, I only made it for this (plus the bit).
To clear a few things up, YES, I have eaten the product, and YES, I do have a deep hatred for the careerist, corporate-ladder-climbing administrative class. Any other resemblences to a similar username are coincidental.
-WwF
20 cent per..... individual?! That's mad capital. Not per ounce or nuthin?
Actually they are closer to 12 cents wholesale, and 20 cents retail, but still.
I shit you not, they have big margins. I would suspect that the total of the factors that go into their production comes out to maybe 3-4 cents a worm. With just a little bit of capital investment in thhe form of buildings and HVAC, it's possible for 2 full-time employees to produce 1 million soldier fly larvae on a really good week, and maybe 500 thousand on a bad week.
I could get rich! And ditch all you losers and never look back!
(Just kidding, I love my comrades)
For as long as there is demand for these bugs as a commodity, and while keeping reptiles and exotic pets is a luxury that requires lots of this commodity, you can probably make quite a buck on it if you get it going. As I've said elsewhere it would take a bit of startup capital and marketing know-how to do.
Before finding out about my current workplace I envisioned an insect farm as a cooperative enterprise that could support a commune. Now that I know more about it, I can say that it would be a good money maker, but it wouldn't produce incredible amounts of food for you to live on. Per unit of labor, it doesn't produce that much more than the format of 6 egg-laying hens per backyard.