So here is the test-aquaponics system altogether!
It floods twice a day, which reduces Fish's water to a 'couple cm. It's a little bit hairy, but I'll try to get a bigger tank for him soon. The plants are stressed out, too, from the multiple re-pottings and some base-construction mishaps. I'm not sure if they'll survive the week. But if not, I'll scrap them and re-work out the grow bed. Right now, it's a plastic bin I cut a hole in the bottom of to fit some sort of PVC dangle I found at Kent. It's shaped like a T from the side, and an O from the top, if you can visualize that. I tried using bathroom caulking to seal up the cracks I made when cutting the hole, but I was playing the design by ear, and the weight of the rocks broke the seal. So then I got the wooden board for the base, some 4x1 to support it, and the 2x2 for legs.
Here's Fish. He's a lonely calico Goldfish, the only one the Petcetera had at the time, and recovering from his fin-rot quite nicely. I'll get him a friend soon. I've heard that the food-fish sometimes kill and eat the koi and goldies, if they're mixed, so I think I'll keep his aquaculture as an indoor system permanently. And I'm not going to eat him. >.>
He's got the smallest sub-pump I could find (one made for bird-bath fountains), a length of pvc tubing, a water-airator, and a fake water plant to hide behind. Waste used to collect between the rocks, but now that 3/4 of the water is pumped up twice a day, the tank has been a lot cleaner. It would be interesting to see if the plants suffer malnuitrition because of this, but I think at this point I'll only notice if the plants recover. Oh well, the exact balance between fish and plant health will have to be discovered in further experiments.
The Picnic!
Next post: The Greenhouse and Vegitable Garden!