Thank you all for joining my group, I hope to do a lot with all anyone interested. Please
tell me any event suggestions you would like us to do.
Started by Dr. George B. Brooks, Jr. Mar 21, 2019. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Dr. George B. Brooks, Jr. Jan 4, 2018. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Started by Dr. George B. Brooks, Jr. Jan 4, 2018. 0 Replies 0 Likes
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Matt, I do. We're just so faaaaaarrrrr away! :)
I know tilapia like spinach, chard, and mustard, too.
When my lettuce bolted at the beginning of summer and turned bitter, we couldn't eat it, so I pulled the plants and hung them in the fish tank for the tilapia. Stripped the plants bare.
I also tried it with cabbages that didn't set a head properly. The tilapia nibbled at those tough leaves over several days too. Didn't eat them completely, but certainly put a dent in them.
If it's green, I think they'll have a go.
FYI. Tilapia eat lettuce.
Pat, one more thought about bridge siphons. They're amazing tools when needed, but because they can flake so easily, I recommend they be avoided. This is a simple way to avoid the bridge siphons while keeping the beds at the same level (if I'm picturing your setup correctly). As water enters the first bed, it enters at a faster rate than it exits through the bottom, smaller pipe. The top pipe is at the highest level desired, and prevents any overflow. The water eventually fills the first bed, then the second, then the third, and then exits. You'd need media guards at each exit/entry point.
The drawbacks are that all three beds will have to be filled at the same time, so if you're using a timer it has to be set to fill them all, and you need enough water in the system. The benefit is that you will not have to worry about overflows and there will be peace in the home. :)
Pat, we have two 55 gallon aquariums in which we raise our fingerlings. They fill from the sump via the pump, and drain back into the sump via a system of bridge siphons. Bridge siphons are notorious for failure, so I have two in each location - a primary and a backup. The backups have saved us many times!
Found conditions identical to what you describe Randy. Looper poop.
Matt, I have a pretty good idea what you are talking about now. (Using direct overflow drains to go into the next bed.) I can see how you might even get the difference in flow to start a bell siphon, but it would take a very careful balancing act. I was trying to figure how to do it with regular siphons without the water level getting low enough and break the siphons.
Sheri..Yes, I have 2 bridge siphons connecting the first 3 growbeds with the last intended to be the drain back to the fishtank. Extending the drain pipe length slightly in the first 2 beds is how I can push as much water as possible with lower flow into each consecutive tank but still have each bed with it's own drain.
The radial filter that is ahead of these 3 beds was not working as well with higher flows. There was just too much turbulence even in a 55 gallon barrel.
Pat, love your story, I got a chuckle with the "I was convinced I was talking to a moron". Don't be to hard on her, I've tried talking my wife through some things, and I will get that blank stare back at me and I'm convinced she is thinking "You're an idiot".
One thing that might interest you is something that is on my project list - it is a catastrophic failure switch. It is basically a water sensor that you can place wherever you want (you would want to place it in an area where you do not want water to rise up to - basically an "oh, shit" spot). if a siphon clogs and the grow bed keeps filling instead of draining, when the water level hits that sensor, it will send power to a relay that will kill power to the pump. This is not a fix, but what it will do is stop your system from spilling out water everywhere until you are able fix the clog and restart the pump.
Anyway I'll let you know when I finish that project and give you the specs on how to build one if you're interested.
Now the daisy chaining Idea isn't anything new the only problem with it, is that each bed will need to be lower than the next to drain into (think of it as stairs going down) so you need to keep that in mind and when you plant your plants -don't have tall growing plants in the highest bed!
Pat, look at the Member Map up there ^ and contact an aquapon near you who can check on your system while you're away. Also, you might want to draw a diagram with labels for your wife and anyone else who might be working the system.
I'm trying to visualize your system...are you using bridge siphons between beds? Do you have overflow pipes near the top of your beds in case your drains/siphons fail?
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