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It's an efficiency thing, I assume. It can increase how much food you can put out per square foot too if it's all done right. Chicken and fish are pretty on par from what I remember for the amount of feed given to the amount of meat produced too as a ratio, the only really lack the eggs. Some fish can even graze or eat plant matter, like certain kinds of catfishes or the pacu who's a relative of the piranha.I don't know why people go thru all these technological loops and hoops when all it takes for food to grow is to put seeds in ground and for protein you go to chickens and eggs.
It's easy to purify water + nutrient mix relative to purifying dirt, so it provides a foothold for purifying a whole ecosystem - same thing for aeroponics, it's the same as aquaponics but with misted water. Basically you make clean compost with aquaponics and layer it onto the polluted soil repeatedly. This soil is then mire usable for animal or human consumption, and reduces the need to clean the soil by pulling the pollutants out with plants. It's probably not used like this yet, not at appreciable scale, but it's the most important application of aquaponics.I don't know why people go thru all these technological loops and hoops when all it takes for food to grow is to put seeds in ground and for protein you go to chickens and eggs.
Because farming isn't as simple as "plant seed in ground"I don't know why people go thru all these technological loops and hoops when all it takes for food to grow is to put seeds in ground and for protein you go to chickens and eggs.
I worked on farms for many years as a young lad and a young man. You should stick to your concrete shit hole.I don't know why people go thru all these technological loops and hoops when all it takes for food to grow is to put seeds in ground and for protein you go to chickens and eggs.
Because, my nigga, I live in the middle of the desert, where we got 2.5" of rain last year. Aquaponics is the most water efficient method of growing that humanity has developed thus far (drip irrigation has significant drawbacks). Aquaponics can be indoor, outdoor, small or large space, scaled for any form of production. Its not a "technological loop and hoop", it's the best thing to come out of agricultural development since John Deere's two cylinder poppin Johnny.I don't know why people go thru all these technological loops and hoops when all it takes for food to grow is to put seeds in ground and for protein you go to chickens and eggs.
It might shock you to know that water is another thing you need to grow both of those things. Considering most traditional agricultural techniques require a lot of water looking at alternatives for this scenario:I don't know why people go thru all these technological loops and hoops when all it takes for food to grow is to put seeds in ground and for protein you go to chickens and eggs.
Is not the way to go watering crops on the daily. The benefit of Aquaponics is both having recyclable water that requires very little to replenish the system when the chemicals get wonky tonk; rather if the water chemistry gets wonky tonk. I know of a few Aussie Aquaponic farmers and American Aquaponic farmers that raise tilapia in essentially repurposed Dairy tanks. But really, you just need a large enough container for the school you're growing.Because, my nigga, I live in the middle of the desert, where we got 2.5" of rain last year.
Ammonia is definitely the largest problem for beginner/smaller aquaponics users--there are several equations you can use to find out how many plants you can grow with your fish. It has to be in balance--enough plants to soak up the nitrate in the system, enough bacteria to convert the ammonia into nitrite/nitrate, enough oxygen in the system to support all the life you have, solids that need to be removed to avoid ammonia spikes--which may seem daunting at first, but with experience it gets easier.I did my own experiments with a gold fish tank and did a raft method of hydroponics/aquaponics; old school. Basically just used a buoyant material, I think I used closed cell foam from a computer package and cut holes for nylon mesh bags/pots. It worked well for a bit as a closed system then started to run into ammonia issues.I boiled down the failure of the ecosystem to overpopulation of gold fish. One of the few systems I find is easier to do at a bigger scale than a 20 gallon tank.
Def. If I were to do the aquarium tank again, I'd probably introduce a prefilter for solid waste like a sump filter and then run the runoff back into the tank via an NFT style hydroponic system. I remember seeing a video on YouTube of an installer putting in an aquaponic system built into a bar top for an open kitchen. The Fish tank is below the bar and visible, sump was under the floor while the top had a reservoir where they would grow whatever greenery. I really wish I could find the video but Search on YouTube is next to useless.Ammonia is definitely the largest problem for beginner/smaller aquaponics users--there are several equations you can use to find out how many plants you can grow with your fish. It has to be in balance--enough plants to soak up the nitrate in the system, enough bacteria to convert the ammonia into nitrite/nitrate, enough oxygen in the system to support all the life you have, solids that need to be removed to avoid ammonia spikes--which may seem daunting at first, but with experience it gets easier.
But right on, my man, you can make any kind of hydro/aqua system out of junk that people throw away. A buddy of mine raises cattle/goats/sheep and used his old stock tanks for his fish. IBC totes are pretty much universal, and many companies throw them away since the old tanks fill their yards.
For the bugs, certain kinds of plants will ward them off. Various kinds of spice/herbal plants and even some ornamental plants secrete oils/resins that harm insects or just discourage them from wanting to get near. It may help a little bit with the raccoons but I have no good advice for them beyond that. These kinds of plant buddies are known as companion plants and there's a whole variety of them out there. Wikipedia has a list of stuff to check out and I'm sure there's more online to find.The biggest issue has been pest intrustion, honestly. With raccoons going after my fish and bugs going after my plants.
Bro why would you do this rather than just buying Portland cement and sand? A 94# sack of Portland is $15 and a 60# sack of sharp sand is $5. You get twice/three times as much raw material for the price, you can really dial in your ratios since you're the one in control of your aggregate, and you don't have to sieve anything.Sieve out your cement mix to remove any gravel
All that my hardware store had was, unfortunately, premixed bags. I'll keep that all in mind and see if I can't order it or if I can find that out of town.Bro why would you do this rather than just buying Portland cement and sand? A 94# sack of Portland is $15 and a 60# sack of sharp sand is $5. You get twice/three times as much raw material for the price, you can really dial in your ratios since you're the one in control of your aggregate, and you don't have to sieve anything.
Been there, fren. Check to see if you have any building supply places in town.All that my hardware store had was, unfortunately, premixed bags. I'll keep that all in mind and see if I can't order it or if I can find that out of town.