Dobermann wrote:
I notice that you use an indexer for your towers. Is this because of lack of pressure at the end or do you find it easier to control the pressure to the zones that way?
Actually I'm not indexing for the towers but I have a diversion valve that was alternating between two banks. It seemed to help with pressure and clogging issues but of course that will all depend on the size pump and the filtration before water goes to the towers as to how much an issue that is.
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You also have soda bottles inverted over the tops. Why and what is going on below that?
Basically I put the hole in the side of the PVC cap and it sprays against the bottle to spread and trickle down into the top of the tower. This helps with slime build up causing splashing of water out of the tower and helps a little against clogging since a hole aimed straight down will clog more quickly, I also do a slit instead of a hole now since snail shells block a round hole much more effectively.
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Why did you decide to raise fish separate from the aquaponics? Is there a good, profitable commercial market for them in your area?
All my fish are in aquaponics systems. What do you mean raise them separate? I have them in a fish tank separate from the plant beds but the water recirculates through the whole system. (you don't want to put large fish in your plant beds really and that wouldn't work in towers or media beds anyway.)
As to commercial market, the small quantities of fish from an aquaponic system are really going to be difficult to market commercially since most processing is either done on a very large scale or very small scale. Large scale you need to provide TONS of fish at a time and on a small scale it is hard to make it profitable to have the fish processed. Fish are not a money maker for me, they provide nutrients and food for us and our farm for the most part. I sell small quantity of fingerlings to people who just need a small number for a home system (since it is hard to buy less then 100 from a large fish farm.) Or to friends and neighbors who are willing to clean their own fish. I need to look into asian markets that might want live fish though. Few people want whole fish that they need to clean/gut themselves though in my neighborhood there was a bit of a market for bluegill that way. I did have bluegill in a tank that was recirculating with a pond plant bed as an aquatic plant aquaponics system that was really easy.
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Do you have somewhere a breakdown of your system with tips and tricks that I can read? Something like what works well for you like the distance between braces on the towers, thickness of the pvc, etc? What do you glue vs pressure fit? Where do you have/wish you had valves? Your layout, etc? I know, that's a LOT to ask, but I kind of thought that with all the questions you have been asked, you probably have something somewhere by now. Even just lots of photos that I can study are quite helpful.
Sorry I don't have such a thing put together. I did at one point try to get support to wright a reference for aquaponics but that didn't happen. Closest thing I have is the slide shows from my Aquaponic Plumbing class on my web site I guess.
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I've been reading and studying this for some time now and have digested and absorbed tons of great info on it. We are out in the desert with summer temps of dry 117 not being uncommon, so I have different issues then you do in FL, not the least of which is keeping the fish and a hoop house cool enough in the summer. Physical limitations won't let me put the fish tanks in the ground at ground level, but I can still berm most of the way around the waist high tanks for the thermal mass factor, leaving a small walkway to access each tank.
Instead of having plastic on the hoop house, put aluminet shade cloth over it for the summer and perhaps dig some ponds around it so as the air moves over the ponds into your system it will be a bit cooler. Or put a ridge vent along the whole top of the greenhouse and then open up the ground level on the cooler side so that the cooler air gets sucked in at the bottom and hot air pulled out at the top to help with cooling. I'm not much of a supporter of greenhouses in sub tropical climates unless you are going high tech with HVAC systems but that is hard to do in a hoop house.
At least in a dry climate you can do evaporative cooling if you have access to a plentiful enough supply of water.
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One way or another, we will be on a few acres in the next 6 months or so, and I want to set up a small commercial system to help support us since we are of retirement age. Taking the time to learn all I can now is where I am at. I am also thinking of adding some chicks, ducks and rabbits for meat purposes and sale. My thoughts are that a well planned layout will let me put as much food production as possible on the small acreage. I still need to see how the stacked tower systems permit sufficient light to the inside and lower plants. I'm thinking perhaps if they are staggered in each row to keep them from being packed back to back. Something like below image. If you even left more horizontal space in each row, you could put more of a stagger to it.
I have some rather negative views of "small commercial systems so you can Retire" Seems like lots of people are selling this idea that you can put in a dinky little commercial system and then have an income off only a few hours of work per day. Simply building the system and even managing to grow beautiful veggies in it won't provide any income, in fact it will cost you money to do this. To get an income from Aquaponics you actually have to put quite a lot of effort into marketing/selling that produce and there is quite a bit of added cost, logistics and other stuff that makes commercial farming far trickier than simply having more veggies than your family will eat. Yea perhaps daily system maintenance of a small commercial system won't take much of your time but when it comes to planting, harvesting, packaging, cleaning up, re-planting, marketing, storing (referigerating), transporting, insurance, advertising, etc, it is more than a full time job for most especially for the first few years of start up which usually requires LOTS of capital since you are not making much money in the early days. So unless you have a guaranteed market for something you KNOW you can grow flawlessly all the time, I would think twice before depending on a small commercial aquaponics system to support anything. I'm not saying Don't do it, but I want to show you a very big reality pill that most people seem to have a hard time swallowing.
As to the towers. They are very good for controlled environment agriculture where the greenhouse space has enough heating/cooling to keep the air temperature from swinging too wide. If you can't control the environment of the greenhouse that well, the towers (like NFT) will have a huge impact on your system water temperature and you will need to limit the amount of towers in relation to the water volume or wind up having to spend lots of extra on water heating/cooling. Remember the towers were developed in a climate/latitude/altitude that greenhouse is the ONLY way for year round production, the sun is intense but at an angle so they are going to be doing greenhouse heating anyway, they have intense sun but the angel of it makes growing in a raft bed rather space inefficient because the front row of the raft, the plants are going to shade several rows of plants behind. So in that location the towers make MUCH more sense for greenhouse production.
In a non greenhouse dependent climate the towers become a bit less valued since a raft bed doesn't have the same disadvantage with sun angles at lower latitudes and the increased water volume is of benefit in the climate where air temps swing very wide between day/night.
That is not to say towers don't have some good niches where they would be useful but don't get too wrapped up in growing vertical unless your only crop is going to be very small plants. Remember that if you plan to grow any large/tall or vining plants that counts as vertical growing too but you don't have to pay to pump the water up high for them since nature takes care of it when you are simply having the plant grow UP.
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I'm also thinking that I could put those plants that don't do well in the afternoon sun on the eastern side of the towers and those that prefer it on the western sides, then let the western side plants help shade the morning sun plants. Full sun in the desert heat is different than full sun in cooler places. Thoughts? Suggestions? I like towers, as they seem to permit a LOT more production per square foot.
Easier said than done, almost all plants would prefer more morning sun. There may be some you can grow that will do OK with lots of afternoon sun but they are mainly going to be your HOT weather or tropical plants so they probably won't help you much in the winter.
Again towers may seem to permit more production per square foot but they seem to do it best when utilized in the way bright agrotech uses theirs (they don't need to be staggered but you do wind up needing to shift the towers weekly so that the larger plants are in back and the new plantings are in front.)
By the way, I'm not much of a supporter of raft aquaponics either. I prefer media beds the most. I just grow quick turn around crops that I need to do a lot of weekly harvest/re-planting in the rafts. Towers I like to plant some continual harvest stuff that is easy to pick directly from the towers but I don't have as many towers on my system anymore as they gave me temperature issues. I've added lots of media beds and like them best for most of the crops other than perhaps lettuce and of course the aquatic plants (watercress, water chestnuts.)