I have finally got around to start to work building my AP system. I bought two 55 gal barrels and eight 275 gal IBC totes a few weeks ago and then the weather got cold and wet- progress stalled. At least we have had a few days
The system I now plan to build is quite a bit different than the one I originally planned. That is due to the help and advice of some of the people here.. Thank you.
I will buy the piping itself at one of the big box stores, but I can save a bundle by buying the fittings online.
Today I will begin cutting the IBC's.
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On another note, I am up to my butt in minnows. My Dad came pver the other day and made the comment I should go catch a small bass or something eat them. I pointed out a tiny bass or even a perch would nail not only all my minnows but every tilapia fry I might produce. Those minnows are eating some of the algae as it forms but not enough to be effiecient.
I made a few changes today. I had been using a fountain pump to squirt water straight up into the air off the top step of the pool (depth 4 inches). This was a simple way to splash water into the pool for oxygenation. Well, at work today I obtained a length of 1/2 inch polycarbonate tubing so I brought it home. I stuck the casing of a chest tube through a styrofoam box that I had kept from a lab test series and made a fountain. I basically turned water entry from 4 inch down to 4 feet down to hit the surface with enough velocity to aerate the water. All this from from hospital waste that would have wound up in the local dump. THANK YOU GREENPIECE...
Jim, I have a cover over that drain that is supposed to be tight enough to keep a swimmer from getting his fingers stuck. But those minnows are smaller and softer than a finger and the water pressure is pretty strong.
I added 200 new channel cat fingerlings friday morning. I must have stressed them when processing because they looked good coming off the truck but were sluggish when released. I did not have time to look yesterday morning but when i got home from doing a heart, I had 30 of them floating.
I removed them and just knew my ammonia would be off the charts, but it was 0 as was nitrite. No dead this morning so I fed. Feeding was lively with catfish rolling on the surface. Food was gone within 5 minutes.
Hi Pat
It would seem that you will need to create a drain cover to keep the fish well away from it. The link is to a ready made device that fits in the existing drain cover hole. Should do the the trick.
That trap looks like a pretty good way to bring in fish in your situation. I use a similar method to capture egg holding tilapia. I use a large clear bucket I get with pretzels from my favorite warehouse club. I lay it on its side in the fish tank and watch for the momma fish to swim in. I flip the bucket up so she can't swim out. After a few minutes she settles down and I reach in move the bucket from the tank and then pull the fry from her mouth so she won't swallow them. If I leave her alone, the other residents decimate the batch in a few minutes.
Good luck with the over population of your pool. Remember they will grow exponentially from the first few months before a linear stage in adolescence. Striking the balance between the fish load and plant load is the hardest part of this AP business.
Try a fish trap.
Morning Pat,
One big problem with cats is their uncanny ability to get so tangled in a standard fish net that they will actually succumb to their wounds. Have you come up with a catfish net design. I avoid netting them and plan on making a hardware cloth net or something to that effect. Any ideas would be appreciated as I want to move the last few to another FT and I would rather not reinvent the wheel or in this case net?
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