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Sylvia,
We have purchased a new food from cargil that I have been using this spring and summer, with very good results.
I have on our site at http://www.westernpond.com/aquaponics.html
I can send you a free sample to try out and also have the tech info labels for it also.
let me know it you would like to test it, we are in Frederick Colorado..
Kirk
Apparently folks that raise fish in aquaculture believe quality food is a priority to their bottom line.
Otherwise, there would not be a market for quality foods. (The Cargil company would not expend resources if it was not a needed product)
Cheap corn based foods build unhealthy and excessive fat in fish... But they are cheap .. As the price of commodities keep going up cheap foods will be harder to find
Kirk
David Waite said:
Wow at 4 bucks a pound makes your fish about gold plated by the time its time to eat them.
Kirk said:
Sylvia,
We have purchased a new food from cargil that I have been using this spring and summer, with very good results.
I have on our site at http://www.westernpond.com/aquaponics.html
I can send you a free sample to try out and also have the tech info labels for it also.
let me know it you would like to test it, we are in Frederick Colorado..
Kirk
Apparently folks that raise fish in aquaculture believe quality food is a priority to their bottom line.
Otherwise, there would not be a market for quality foods. (The Cargil company would not expend resources if it was not a needed product)Cheap corn based foods build unhealthy and excessive fat in fish... But they are cheap .. As the price of commodities keep going up cheap foods will be harder to find
Kirk
David Waite said:
Wow at 4 bucks a pound makes your fish about gold plated by the time its time to eat them.
Kirk said:
Sylvia,
We have purchased a new food from cargil that I have been using this spring and summer, with very good results.
I have on our site at http://www.westernpond.com/aquaponics.html
I can send you a free sample to try out and also have the tech info labels for it also.
let me know it you would like to test it, we are in Frederick Colorado..
Kirk
Heck in my area, I get the Aquamax 4000 for about 40-60 cents a pound (but I have to call ahead and have them order it then drive up to a feed store that is a bit out of the way to get it at those prices.) If I go to Aquatic Eco Systems, they sell it for around $50 for a 50# bag.
Now the Cargil might be high quality food and I expect if any aquaculture operations are using it, they have to be getting a far better price on bulk than any of us would see since remember that large aquaculture operations have to sell their fish at wholesale prices.
They already use too much soy in the fish foods for my liking. (corn and soy both being rather poor on the omega 3:6 ratio)
However, there is much study going into algae culture lately and I think we will be hearing about algae based fish foods here in the future that may not only avoid the heavy use of wild caught fish meals but may also be able to improve the omega 3:6 ratio over the mostly corn/soy based fish feeds most of us are currently stuck using.
They already use too much soy in the fish foods for my liking. (corn and soy both being rather poor on the omega 3:6 ratio)
However, there is much study going into algae culture lately and I think we will be hearing about algae based fish foods here in the future that may not only avoid the heavy use of wild caught fish meals but may also be able to improve the omega 3:6 ratio over the mostly corn/soy based fish feeds most of us are currently stuck using.
I've been growing moringa for a few years now. It can grow fast once it gets going in late spring. It may tend to freeze back to the ground in winter though depending on how bad the freezes are any given year here in FL.
I will warn that it can be a really tedious plant to pick the leaves off of since they are tiny. I never found my tilapia to be all that interested in eating the leaves though even when I let them wilt first. Perhaps if one were to dry them and make a powder that you could then use mixed with other ingredients to make fish feed but that is quite a lot of work.
I'm hoping my trees will produce some fruit since I want to see how that is for cooking. Very useful tree though.
I am extremely eager to try a new idea I have in using duckweed to it's fullest contribution, without having it consume nutrients that my beds can use for plants destined for MY table. It's great that duckweed is a heavy feeder, but that means I DON'T want to be using my fish water to cultivate it.
I am experimenting with using chicken manure (highly diluted) to fortify the nitrogen and micro-nutrients to feed independent duckweed ponds. I am working to make sure that I am not going to possibly introduce unwanted bacteria from the chickens in feeding the fish, but it WILL (potentially) created a HUGE savings in BEDDING MATERIAL that I currently PURCHASE for my chickens in their laying house. I have read several articles about how duckweed is being adapted to treating HUMAN SEWAGE and that is how the idea was started... I am very encouraged by what I have learned so far.
My thought was to design a system where the chicken droppings would fall through their roosts at night directly into some sort of shallow, water-filled receptacle for use in feeding a passive duckweed pond. If I have success with this, I will post it up with pictures. Composting the VERY hot, highly odorous chicken manure is one of my LEAST favorite aspects of my farm, and it seems like the duckweed could take a lot of that workload away from me AND provide a huge amount of supplemental Tilapia feed.
Thoughts?
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