Aquaponic Gardening

A Community and Forum For Aquaponic Gardeners

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Fish-less Systems

This is a group for people who have any kinds of fish-less systems, but yet are not doing classical hydroponics. Where we can share what we have come to find about making-home made nutrients, oganic-hydro, pee-ponics, worm tea hydro, bio-ponics, home-made buffers, water chemistry or anything else that is perhaps inappropriate for fish. As well as experimenting and sharing results for  things that might be alright for our aquatic critters.

Members: 68
Latest Activity: Nov 21, 2015

Warning... Much of what may be contained here may, or may not be a good idea to apply to a system populated with living, breathing, happy fish, crustaceans or any other aquatic life. So be smart...

Discussion Forum

Temporarily Fishless

Started by TCLynx. Last reply by TCLynx Sep 7, 2015. 2 Replies

Just wondering if anyone has some recommendations on how one might supplement a temporarily (Backup failure during HOT HOT stormy summer night) fishless system used for commercial production?I want…Continue

Bioponic

Started by Gregor Sidler. Last reply by Gregor Sidler May 26, 2015. 13 Replies

Brand new here. Got the link from Meir Lazar to join here. I am in the process of building my first system. For the past almost year I am looking, reading, watching just about every video and article…Continue

Some plants grow better in my raft, others in my flood and drain?

Started by Stacey King. Last reply by Stacey King Mar 24, 2015. 2 Replies

I'm running a humonia system. I have a system of 6 half barrels, at the first end are two raft barrels, the other four barrels are flood and drain. The pump runs to flood the beds 20 times per day,…Continue

Can nitrate water be stored?

Started by Gene Parbst Feb 1, 2015. 0 Replies

I started a 25 gallon fishless startup 12 days ago and the nitrates are coming up very nice.  When the ammonia and nitrite drop to 0ppm the nitrogen cycle will be complete.  After the nitrogen cycle…Continue

Tags: storage, water, nitrate

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Comment by Meir Lazar on March 22, 2012 at 2:53pm
I just tested the PH again and either it dropped down to 7 or I contaminated my first test. Looks like I won't need lashes or leaves after all :D
Comment by Jon Parr on March 22, 2012 at 2:05pm
Replacing lashes? Silly autocorrect. Replacing leaves, I meant. Yes, bummer about the dark water. And it gets so dark you won't even know if there's fish in there. I don't mind that on some tanks, but some I'd like to keep clear too. Wood and sawdust work too, to naturally acidity, but with the same effect. Carbon dioxide also works, bit it's hardly a natural way to go, and fish don't appreciate too much. I used to have no difficulty keeping pH down, now I can't keep it down, and I'm not sure what has changed. The media is the same, and pH in all systems is 8.0-8.2 unless I actively fight it down.
Comment by Meir Lazar on March 22, 2012 at 11:26am
Hi Jon,
Thanks for your suggestion, it sounds like it wouldn't hard to put oak leaves in my grow-beds, but the color change is sad though. I like how crystal clear it is...
I'll see if the PH naturally drops down due to the nitrification process which should automagically bring it down, if not, I will have to consider it as an option. Thanks for sharing!
Comment by Jon Parr on March 22, 2012 at 9:55am
Hello Meir. I'm guessing you might be dosing a little heavy on the pee to cause that kind of a spike, but I'm not experienced in that. I am, however, using a 5 gallon mesh bag (paint strainer) of oak leaves in a 120 gallon FT to try and lower my pH from my 8.2 well water. It's slow, but I'm down to 7.4 in two weeks. I plan on adding another bag this weekend, and then replacing lashes every month or so. Pros? It's abundantly available, year around, natural, it's free, and my Redclaws have found a second heaven. I thought they were escaping, then I found them all in the leaves. Cons? Just one, so far. Oak leaves turn the water black. Very black, maybe 1' vis. :)
Comment by Meir Lazar on March 22, 2012 at 9:05am

So I've noticed that after I dose my systems with aged urine, the PH spikes to about 9. I was wondering if anyone has any natural buffers against this kind of base? I don't want to use ph down or any chemical acids (I used to use phosphoric acid when I was into hydroponics). I'm currently using crushed coral as a buffer from the PH swinging too low, but now I need a buffer from the PH swinging too high. Any ideas or anyone using anything themselves? Thanks!

Comment by Vlad Jovanovic on March 20, 2012 at 3:39pm

Dave... Carey was kind enough to explain his greenwall in the Pee Ponics thread up above...

Comment by David Schwinghamer on March 20, 2012 at 10:39am

Explain your greenwall Carey

Comment by Carey Ma on March 20, 2012 at 6:20am

That's why I use a greenwall. It acts as a giant bio filter. I piss directly into the trough as the water is running every week or so.

Comment by TCLynx on March 20, 2012 at 6:10am

if the bio-filter stalls or it stinks then dilution by partial water changes should take care of it and I'm sure some dirt plants would like some of that water (diluted first) to boost them.

If the plants start showing signs of damage, dilution might come too late but they might recover too.

Comment by TCLynx on March 20, 2012 at 6:08am

Well when no fish are in the system, only dangers are killing plants, causing a spike high enough to stall the bio-filter, or making it stink.

 

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