Are you interested in growing commercially? Do you already grow commercially? This is the place for exchanging ideas and experiences, and making new contacts in commercial aquaponic agriculture
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I would like to do it commercially but keeping up with all the planting is a chore. I am investigating what plants would be easy to grow and have the best chance of selling. So far I have decided that ung choy, watercress, and celery are the most prolific growing plants. You can't stop them. I now have to get up enough systems. I also want to spread the word about aquaponics. I think I have talked at least 2 people into building a small system. One of the people said to me that she found a container to use as a tank on craig's list. Yea I said and it cost $200.00 doesn't it. She said yes how did I know. I look at craig's list all the time. I then told her I could get the same thing for $25.00. I really feel good about being able to show people how they can save money. You need a lot of contacts. I don't have enough but I do have a few. So I hope to be able to help her get a small system up for very little money. Maybe this is my lot in life. I do get a lot of people to come and look at the systems. Sometimes I think I am a little stupid to begin these things at my age and then I realize that if I don't do things that I enjoy and have a passion for what is life for anyway. Not that it matters but I will be 70 in Nov.
Sahib, Funny thing, I was thinking of posting some of this information for everyone. My wife was the president of produce for a large food co-op here in MI. She gets occasional updates from one of the organic / non organic suppliers. I can share this info.
My wife is traveling, dropped off my oldest to college, but once she gets online or calls me this evening, I can send over pricing info for produce. Non of the produce is grown AP, some may be hydro but I am not certain if the list is that detailed.
Look for an update soon.
Sahib, Funny thing, I was thinking of posting some of this information for everyone. My wife was the president of produce for a large food co-op here in MI. She gets occasional updates from one of the organic / non organic suppliers. I can share this info.
My wife is traveling, dropped off my oldest to college, but once she gets online or calls me this evening, I can send over pricing info for produce. Non of the produce is grown AP, some may be hydro but I am not certain if the list is that detailed.
Look for an update soon.
Although my packaging will be minimal, I would very much be interested in this info too.Thanks.
Two Jay said:Sahib, Funny thing, I was thinking of posting some of this information for everyone. My wife was the president of produce for a large food co-op here in MI. She gets occasional updates from one of the organic / non organic suppliers. I can share this info.
My wife is traveling, dropped off my oldest to college, but once she gets online or calls me this evening, I can send over pricing info for produce. Non of the produce is grown AP, some may be hydro but I am not certain if the list is that detailed.
Look for an update soon.
I run an organic veggie/fruit buying club here in Sarasota called Passion for Produce. There's between 40-44 members now.
Michelle Silva said:Although my packaging will be minimal, I would very much be interested in this info too.Thanks.
Two Jay said:Sahib, Funny thing, I was thinking of posting some of this information for everyone. My wife was the president of produce for a large food co-op here in MI. She gets occasional updates from one of the organic / non organic suppliers. I can share this info.
My wife is traveling, dropped off my oldest to college, but once she gets online or calls me this evening, I can send over pricing info for produce. Non of the produce is grown AP, some may be hydro but I am not certain if the list is that detailed.
Look for an update soon.
Not to dampen your dreams and vision, nut so as to keep reality in mind...especially for me :-) Aquaponics businesses grow, but profits prove hard to reap Many farmers face challenges in finding markets for their products Article by Pacific Business News (Honolulu) - by Sophie Cocke Pacific Business News original 9/24/10 modified 9/29/10
Approximatey 3,000 square feet of fine Italian basil grew on the east side of the Big Island last year with no buyer in sight.
“We couldn’t sell it — we could hardly give it away,” said Cheriess Bugado, who with her husband, Justin, began an aquaponics farm on their two-acre property in Honomu.
I think as in any business, it is vital to get some sort of idea who will be taking produce, and at what price, prior to having your system built and your crops ready to go. I'm not sure what the people went through prior to getting their venture off the ground, but this is what we have found for South African conditions:
1) Organics and sustainable production is not big. We will therefore have to make a go of it in the normal markets as well.
2) The farmer always gets smoked at fresh produce markets. The right thi to be able to achieve, is to value add and then sell on a regular basis to retail outlets. We looked at what we could get "buyers price" from retailers, vs market averages at the fresh produce markets. The difference was nearly double (selling a value added product). The effort required to reach the value adding was also not immense - cuttinglettuce into ready pillow bags, and bagging 30 g pockets of herbs into plastic punnets or pillow bags.
3) for us, the fresh fish market hardly exists. The fish barely pays for itsself,making it worth while to design a system skewed towards plant production.
4) many crops that appear to be good choices just based on aquaponic production potential (like basil - everyone wants to grow basil) are not rapid market movers. We spoke to many wholesalers and started composing a "hit list" of crops that will cause you to go under. Typically they were in over supply, or there were big players in the market ready to flood it at the least sight of a newby. In our case, tomatoes was an example of such a crop. Outof our conversations with these buyers and sellers,we also started getting an idea of produce that may be a good niche option.
Out of all this work, we came up with a strategy favouring South African conditions: Go larger than Family, get funding agencies on board, create jobs by doing it all - seedlings to punnets. We costed and ran financials on a system of greenhouses with a single processing plant, and the outcomes of such a venture (on paper) became quite impressive for the value adding side, while the farming side just scraped by. Over here, the research seem to point to small niche market selling, or large, multi product value adding operations as feasible, but in between, you are looking for trouble. Not sure if any of this is applicable to America.
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