I have a 16X24 with 5 -275 gal IBC's painted black for passive solar heat. I plan to put in an AP setup using bluegill. First question is how many can I raise in 1 275 gal tank? #2 I have a large 4 acre spring fed pond well stocked with bass, bluegill & crappie, can I utilize my pond inwith my AP operation? #3 How do you determine how many fish to grow in each tank, and how many growbeds a tank will support? Do you continually add baby fish to have different stages of fish in the tank at the same time?#4 How big should the bluegill be at harvest? We like to fillet them so is 1 lb about right?
Thanks
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I'm not sure if concrete blocks stacked would be able to hold gravel back from pushing the blocks out. It may work for raft beds where it is only water pushing out but gravel with flood and drain water and plant roots can put much more force outward so you might need to pound stakes down to help hold the blocks in from toppling outward.
The test kits, well you can get them from Sylvia by clicking on the shop tab at the top of the page. Or you might search the internet for deals on them. That pet place/that fish place sometimes has a good price on them when they have a sale.
Yes you can get wider liner. The epdm starts at 5 or 5.5 wide and next step is usually ten feet wide.
I think the durascrim starts at 6' wide.
The flow, yes you can do an in ground sump (make sure the lip is high enough that you won't get a heavy rain flooding into the sump tank.) with the pump in the sump you can pump up to the fish tank (with a SLO drain stands for solids lifting overflow) and you can have the water flow from the fish tank to the grow beds which would drain to the sump tank. This is often called a CHIFT PIST (constant height in fish tank, pump in sump tank) system or a CHOP (constant height one pump)
There are other options too, you might do a CHOP mark 2 where you would pump to both the fish tank and the grow beds from the same pump and both the fish tank and grow beds would drain back to the sump. I would recommend CHOP 2 if you want to use an indexing valve.
Morningstar uses concrete fish tanks as do many other fish farms I've seen. They do not use liners but coat the tanks with a waterproofing, I assume that would be for economic reasons. There are many options but I pulled this one up - http://www.sanitred.com/SwimmingPool.htm It is a rubberized coating for relining swimming pools. Of course it means pouring a concrete base which may cancel any cost savings
Firestone liners (which are 45 mil EPDM) come in sizes which would meet your needs. They go up to 50'x100', below is the size I believe you would need based on 35x16x1.5:
http://www.pondliner.com/product/20_x_40_firestone_45_mil_epdm_pond...
Yes you can get wider liner. The epdm starts at 5 or 5.5 wide and next step is usually ten feet wide.
I think the durascrim starts at 6' wide.
The flow, yes you can do an in ground sump (make sure the lip is high enough that you won't get a heavy rain flooding into the sump tank.) with the pump in the sump you can pump up to the fish tank (with a SLO drain stands for solids lifting overflow) and you can have the water flow from the fish tank to the grow beds which would drain to the sump tank. This is often called a CHIFT PIST (constant height in fish tank, pump in sump tank) system or a CHOP (constant height one pump)
There are other options too, you might do a CHOP mark 2 where you would pump to both the fish tank and the grow beds from the same pump and both the fish tank and grow beds would drain back to the sump. I would recommend CHOP 2 if you want to use an indexing valve.
Nope, I don't have a large commercial system.
Here is a link to the thread on BYAP about my Big system which has been ever changing over the years.
And my back yard 300 gallon system
And the closest thing I have to a commercial system is really quite small at the moment but it is going to expand soon to provide towers for a market. Tower system
I have been toying with the idea of using chain link fence top rails as a top frame for a liner bed but I don't know that this would be sturdy enough for gravel but I plan to try it for a water catching trough under the towers when I expand the tower system here in the near future. I have used top rails and cattle panels to make frames for some elevated gravel beds but they have not been in operation long enough for me to really endorse them and I've seen some issues with the one I lined with HDPE 1/16" hard liner. I expect this could perhaps work well for raft beds but gravel beds are more challenging.
Nope, I don't have a large commercial system.
Here is a link to the thread on BYAP about my Big system which has been ever changing over the years.
And my back yard 300 gallon system
And the closest thing I have to a commercial system is really quite small at the moment but it is going to expand soon to provide towers for a market. Tower system
I have been toying with the idea of using chain link fence top rails as a top frame for a liner bed but I don't know that this would be sturdy enough for gravel but I plan to try it for a water catching trough under the towers when I expand the tower system here in the near future. I have used top rails and cattle panels to make frames for some elevated gravel beds but they have not been in operation long enough for me to really endorse them and I've seen some issues with the one I lined with HDPE 1/16" hard liner. I expect this could perhaps work well for raft beds but gravel beds are more challenging.
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