"Limitation is the mother of good management", Michael Evanari
Location: Southwestern Oregon (Jackson County), Zone 7
Idle dreamer
H Ludi Tyler wrote:
You could use a swimming pool to raise fish if you also grew water plants in the pool. This is what I want to try with my set-up - half for fish and half for water plants.
Idle dreamer
Idle dreamer
Idle dreamer

Idle dreamer
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duane wrote:
hi Silverseeds,
I think that you have a good a handle on your system.
creating an "built" system for the fish to live in a naturally as possible is certainly within permaculture principles.
the problems arise when they are turned into "factories"
having many interconnected loops, rather than trying to do everything in one loop, allows optimization and stabillization
in a large body of water, these loops take place locally outside the main water recirculation, but in a small built system, they must be designed in
I look forward to seeing the results
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velacreations wrote:
I just want one example, just one, of a system that has a stocking density greater than 1lb per 20 gallons that resembles the system you propose...
Just one....

Idle dreamer
H Ludi Tyler wrote:
I think I might include a duckweed tank in my system, just to see how it helps. What about a duckweed tank with a sand bottom with clams?
duane wrote:
Silverseeds, try to keep your stocking rate below this!!!
SILVERSEEDS wrote:
Im pretty sure clams eat mostly green water and... i actually thought of trying a greenwater bed out with plankton and clams in there eating up the greenwater.....

Idle dreamer
H Ludi Tyler wrote:
My garden pond is super green. Guess I need some clams!
I want to revisit it even though you could just simple let it ice over naturally. Quite simply in order to keep water from freezing in cold weather it must be warmed. The cheapest and most environmentally friendly way I know to do this is a solar water heater. Considering you have a pump already to circulate water you could plan in a solar heater as simple as black pipes in a frame under Plexiglas. Pump cold water in and the sun heats it so warm water comes out. Now you would need a shut off valve to slow or speed up the flow for temperature control and you can shut it down for summer. It will take a little tinkering to get the waterflow right for a steady temperature and it might need adjusting every few days depending on the outside temps but given the overall thought that has to go into a project such as this with balancing everything out controling the temperature is the easy part.
Brenda
Bloom where you are planted.
http://restfultrailsfoodforestgarden.blogspot.com/
Brenda Groth wrote:
any people in zone 4/5 have tilapia out in a pond (not in a tank?)
SILVERSEEDS wrote:
eventually im going to build a solid cement one. i could actually do it right in my native soil with some efforts, as I have that expanding clay in my soil, but I prefer guarantees.
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