Hi - I actually joined here last summer but am just now getting to really dive into this forum. I've done a heap of reading the last week or two on here, trying to learn all I can. I also just ordered a DVD from this website (Murray?) on getting started. My husband and I watched the IBC video last summer and printed off the booklet. This month I printed the first copy of the magazine on this website and we're going to order the back issues and subscribe to the magazine. And, of course, keep reading this forum and taking notes as much as we can.
We have a 1,000 gallon fiberglass tank we want to use for the FT. We are building a 12X20 enclosed porch on the east side of our mobile home. We want to dig a hole in the ground to lower the FT tank (a foot or two - it's 5' tall) and then build the porch floor around the tank. That will put the weight of the FT on the ground instead of the floor. We'll insulate the tank and then build a plywood box to support the sides. The sides will then be supported by the porch floor around it, too. It has a drain pipe in one end so it can be drained easily (hopefully to help remove solids on the bottom, too). Hubby says we can run a pipe from that drain out to the dirt garden. Do we need to coat the inside of this tank with something or is it ok like it is? Being under/in the porch like this should help keep the water temps in the tank more stable (cool in the summer and warm in the winter) and rain cannot get into the hole that the tank will be sitting in. I want to incorporate a small waterfall for the FT for aeration and for enjoyment.
Fish in the tank - want to go with something that's indigenous to our area (they tend to thrive better). We have a large lake close to us and there is bass, sun perch, catfish, etc. They have bass tounaments there. I don't like catfish but I do like the bass and perch. The bass eat the perch, though, if I remember correctly. Do bass do well in an AP? We could go fishing on the lake but we don't have TIME.

With a tank this large, can we get the fish to reproduce on their own if they aren't overcrowded? We do have some ponds that we can put brood fish in (one has catfish in it already - unless they all died this winter). The ponds can go dry on us when it gets bad droughts (like the one last year). That's why we like the FT idea in the house. There is a place about 2 hours from us that raises and sells fish commercially - we're looking at getting fish from them when we are ready to get started but I would rather not have to keep buying fish if we can help it.
The GB's will go along the south and east side of the porch (minus a door to the outside on the one side of the south wall). We have some big old aluminum windows (took them out of the mobile home) that we will put on those walls. When it's warm, we can open the windows. We're going to put a clear roof on the south end of the porch and solid roof the rest of the way. When it's too hot, we'll cover the clear roof with aluminet - we even use this on our mobile home roof to reflect heat away. It's for greenhouses. We have more trouble with getting too warm than being too cold. This porch will have a patio door on the west wall (on the trailer - it's already there). I have a wood stove in that room and when it's cold we can open the patio door to let the heat go into the porch if we need to. The windows don't have screens and I'm thinking that we can open them when it is warm enough to allow pollinators/bugs into the porch.
Since we're dealing with a lot of weight with this kind of thing, we're looking at using one of our telephone poles (bought them) to cut the supports for the porch (the legs). They are treated and will last a long time and are probably overkill but we have them and I'd rather know that the porch floor is really supported. The floor will be treated plywood. We have some large Rubbermaid stock tanks that we can also use (sump? Nursery? ??). The GB's - I thought about just building beds along the walls with lumber and painting them with fish safe apoxy (saw that on one of the member's threads) but I'm also liking the blue plastic barrels cut in half. We do have access to all the free IBC's we can haul off. We'll probably start with one of those for learning as we're building the porch. My husband is one of those guys who is very handy with his hands (mechanic, carpenter, farmer, etc.). I'm the one who comes up with the wacky ideas, he says, "Nope, that won't work." and then he makes it work for me anyway.
I want to incorporate a worm farm on the porch (the room with the patio door is my kitchen so I can throw kitchen scraps to them easy). And a BSF box out by the chicken pen. We want to keep the feeding of the fish as natural as possible (not crazy about pelleted fish feed, not to speak of having to pay for it) so we're researching things like duckweed (which we found out is all over our state wild). I'd like to know if we can utilize manure tea (from goats) as a spray on the plants in the AP - can that hurt the fish?
Any dead/extra fish we have different ways to use - fertilizer in the garden; barn cats and farm dogs; chickens; BSF bin; etc.
Goals - to keep this as simple of an operation as possible. We own a business and run this farm and we don't need something else to add to the work load if we can help it. We need this to be very basic, nothing fancy. We also have an issue with keeping elec. going for a pump - we are at the end of the power lines and it is not unusual for our power to go off on a regular basis. We have a generator but we don't like to run it if we can help it and to keep a pump going 24 hours a day w/gennie is not practicle. We've had times where we were iced in for days with no power. We are looking at solar so when the sun is shining, we can power the AP with that but in the dark/extended clouds - plan B is needed if our power is knocked out for the time being. We welcome all input on this.
Plants that we want in the GB's - anything that will grow easy and well. The rest will just have to stay out in the dirt garden - like the sweet potatoes and squash? Our garden is about 2 feet deep black compost and stuff grows like crazy in it (our okra gets to 14 feet tall or more). Squash plants get HUGE. But I want stuff growing in the AP that I can tend to easy from the house and bring stuff in to use in the kitchen right there. Greens of all kinds, beans, tomatoes (the AP gets around soil borne issues with maters here), strawberries - anything that isn't taking up too much space or getting too tall (like the okra). In our reg. garden we usually have sweet potatoes, tomatoes, bush and pole beans, okra, greens, beets, turnips, eggplant, cabbage, broccoli, etc. We also have blueberries in another area and a fig tree and some plum trees. I have paw paws to set out this spring and another fig. Herbs, too - oregano in the garden; thyme, rosemary, parsley, mints, etc. in pots. If I can put the mints in the AP that would help control them - they like to run amuck. I like to make my own sauerkraut - any one tried cabbage in the AP?
We are torn between the flood and drain and the constant flood methods - the GB's should be just a little higher than the FT once we drop the FT in the ground. Hoping we can gravity feed water back to the FT.
We have a son with five kids and one on the way - we try to help with the groceries as much as we can, plus we are getting up in years and I'm trying to make growing our food as easy as we can. I apologize for this being so lengthy but there are so many questions and ideas...and I've still got more questions to ask!! But not today. I'll spare you. Thanks in advance for any comments/ideas...