that looks great Rick, nice job.
picked up 8 more bales of hay from the local feed dealer, had to chuckle because the owner, perhaps feeling contrite,
even came out and helped lift the bales of hay up into the truck. So I got a Ram commercial picture of my truck with hay in it, 
a rare sight, and my fireman neighbor helped me unload them onto a pallet.
Am now ready for my worms. Easy to put together, bigger than I thought, held more, and off I went twice outside in search of good stuff for my worms.
You can get by with soaked shredded paper but I have a lot more interesting things to put in there, liked a trove of rotted hay with attached dirt, leaves, 
and some organic potting soil with no chemicals but ground up fish meal or something fishy and worm castings and bat guano.
What a tasty mix!  Nothing is too good for my worms...now I have to find some over the hill vegetables in the fridge to chop up and intersperse down into the soil.  Need to find out if worms do ok with coffee grounds. That will be my research tonight.  Though you can buy worm food...what's the point when I have plenty of natural stuff for them.  Chopped up banana rinds. They will be sambaying away down there to a latin beat.  
Worm farm was well made, the fabric container was like a super heavy duty duffle bag from LL Bean.  Probably double that thickness but   nothing was skimped on it. 2 pounds of red wigglers are headed my way.  Didn't think worms would be my first pet here...
Have a spot in the corner of the garden shed for the worm farm, which I will keep a little more heat on during the winter for them.