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For my first build I wanted to stay as cheap as possible. So many how to's describe their parts as stuff lying around but fresh out of apartment living while in college, I have nothing lying around but textbooks. I'm in a house whit a backyard now, and have changed my christmas wishlist to tools tools and more tools. For the building supplies I've been using craigslist.
Tracking cost is important for this build as my motivation is comes from a new credo of making not earning. I'd rather grow and build instead of shop and buy as much as possible. So I'm keeping a log of the running cost of my aquaponic endeavors. My build so far includes 4"x10' drain pipe = $5 1"x10' pvc = $3 1/2"x10' pvc = $2 assorted pvc fittings = $15 (fittings include bulkhead fittings, caps for drain pipes and caps for bell siphons) 100' of 1/4" black plastic tubing = $12 (bought way too much! but cheaper by the roll - maybe i'll build a mister system for summer) 10' of 1/2" tubing = $5 5 gallon buckets x2 = $10 55 gallon barrel = $25 250 gph aquarium pump = $20 4 dozen goldfish, $.25ea = $12 massive supply of fish food (flakes) = $5 hydroton = $8 net pots x16 (.50ea) = $8
I'll post pics as soon as I get my hands on a cord to download them form my camera, but here's the rough description.
It's a tube style ebb and flow system made of 5' lengths of drain pipe with eight 3" holes. That's 16 plants to start. There's a 5 gallon bucket with a bell siphon to periodically flood the two grow tubes.
I wanted a bucket each, but the pump is too weak and doesn't fill fast enough to create a siphon when both buckets are hooked up. One bucket works great, but barely fills the two tubes. Right now they both fill simultaneously but I plan to get some new fittings so that one drains into another, and maybe that will yield a good water level.
Right now the water rises unevenly. It floods the draining end of the tube up to the top, but the fill end only gets 1/3 full by the time the siphon stops. Need to get a better pump or stick with a single tube per bucket. Wondering if it will be efficient use of nutrients to cycle water through one bucket/tube into another bucket/tube. Will take more height and second tube will get sloppy seconds on the nutrients. But is that even a factor?
I started a bunch of seeds germinating while I built the system, hoping for better timing than I have. The sprouts needed to get out of the wet paper towels so I went ahead and buried 2 of each plant in an inch of hydroton (with tiny leaves sticking out as best I could manage) and have let the system run for two days now. The bean sprout wasn't ready and is looking morbid. The rest seem unphased. I still have a bunch of sprouts on paper towels but I don't know how long they'll last.
Transplanting from paper towel I tore a lot of roots, so I'm not very confident about that method. They grew from seed to leaf bearing sprouts within 3-4 days, but have stopped growing and it's been a week. I'm thinking of going back to my local hydroponics store and picking up some rockwool cubes or some other form of seed germination medium, as well as building an indoor seedling grow system. That means lights and fans and another pump, but I think I can manage those on the cheap.
I also have an aquarium air pump that I've seen used to pump water, and air powered ebb and flow. I am slowly collecting 2 liter soda bottles and the like and plan to experiment with this for the seedling station. Idea is to pump air into top of a sealed water reservoir that has a submerged line running out and into the bottom of a seedling tray. The air pushes down on water forcing it out the submerged line and into the grow tray. The tray is elevated so that when the air pump shuts off gravity will return the water to the reservoir.
fyi, I have tomato, lettuce, spinach, arugula, basil, cilantro, jalapeno, and black beans.
Never grown anything since elementary school experiments so this is all quite new to me. No idea how big or how fast these plants will get. I know tomatoes and beans are vines or vine like and will need a different setup. I also realize it is december and not a time for planting seeds. But I live in San Diego and the temperature is always between 50-70 and it never ever rains. So I am supposing that backyard hydroponics will be pretty stable year round.
The goldfish are stand-ins. They'll get the system running while I work out the kinks and might make nice food for the tilapia I plan to grow when ready for expansion.
No idea where I'm going to find the tilapia but that's for next year.
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