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Tilapia my be very durable but only if you can provide warm water year round. They grow when water is over 74 F and they definitely like water up in the mid 80s F.
If your water is below 70 F, tilapia only survive and if the water is gonna drop below 55 F, Tilapia may not survive (mine survived down to 53 F though they were not doing to well but when the water got to 50 F all the tilapia left in the outdoor systems died.
I am in central Florida and those tanks were under plastic and the water still got down below 50 F this past winter.
I live in Indiana I heat my tanks even in the summer when the water temp goes below 70 heater kicks in. I have Tilapia from mid May to October under plastic. After that its time to start over, I keep gold fish in the outside tanks over winter and Tilapia in the freezer. In Jan I start breeding Tilapia in aquariums in my basement, grow out in aquariums and 100 gallon stock tank, and hope for an early spring
TCLynx said:Tilapia my be very durable but only if you can provide warm water year round. They grow when water is over 74 F and they definitely like water up in the mid 80s F.
If your water is below 70 F, tilapia only survive and if the water is gonna drop below 55 F, Tilapia may not survive (mine survived down to 53 F though they were not doing to well but when the water got to 50 F all the tilapia left in the outdoor systems died.
I am in central Florida and those tanks were under plastic and the water still got down below 50 F this past winter.
What kind of size do you get out of your tilapia with that shorter growing season Earl?
Earl ward said:I live in Indiana I heat my tanks even in the summer when the water temp goes below 70 heater kicks in. I have Tilapia from mid May to October under plastic. After that its time to start over, I keep gold fish in the outside tanks over winter and Tilapia in the freezer. In Jan I start breeding Tilapia in aquariums in my basement, grow out in aquariums and 100 gallon stock tank, and hope for an early spring
TCLynx said:Tilapia my be very durable but only if you can provide warm water year round. They grow when water is over 74 F and they definitely like water up in the mid 80s F.
If your water is below 70 F, tilapia only survive and if the water is gonna drop below 55 F, Tilapia may not survive (mine survived down to 53 F though they were not doing to well but when the water got to 50 F all the tilapia left in the outdoor systems died.
I am in central Florida and those tanks were under plastic and the water still got down below 50 F this past winter.
They are about 1-1.5 lb anything smaller than that goes in the 100 in the basement. They are about 5-ins when they go outside I only raise 300 a year. I have looked at other fish but its kind of a moot point temp gets to low for the plants and heating the green house is not cost effective. The tanks out side are well insulated bottom, sides and semi-covered
Richard Wyman said:What kind of size do you get out of your tilapia with that shorter growing season Earl?
Earl ward said:I live in Indiana I heat my tanks even in the summer when the water temp goes below 70 heater kicks in. I have Tilapia from mid May to October under plastic. After that its time to start over, I keep gold fish in the outside tanks over winter and Tilapia in the freezer. In Jan I start breeding Tilapia in aquariums in my basement, grow out in aquariums and 100 gallon stock tank, and hope for an early spring
TCLynx said:Tilapia my be very durable but only if you can provide warm water year round. They grow when water is over 74 F and they definitely like water up in the mid 80s F.
If your water is below 70 F, tilapia only survive and if the water is gonna drop below 55 F, Tilapia may not survive (mine survived down to 53 F though they were not doing to well but when the water got to 50 F all the tilapia left in the outdoor systems died.
I am in central Florida and those tanks were under plastic and the water still got down below 50 F this past winter.
Provided you can keep the greenhouse warm enough that the water doesn't freeze in the pipes, you could grow many types of fish year round. Granted, some types grow very slowly when the water gets cold but If the greenhouse is designed such that it will keep the water pipes from freezing, then a system could function right through winter even if perhaps on a reduced production basis for the coldest months.
In my experience broccoli seems to like cold weather, so do most of the other related vegetable crops. Cabbage, Kale, collards, kohlrabi, turnip, radish, mustard, and many more. Some might show a bit of damage from frost but I've seen broccoli with ice on the leaves and the sun melting it off and no damage from that.
Anyway, Down here since I can't keep the water cool enough for trout nor easily warm enough for tilapia, I'm quite happy with a year round fish that can take both extremes of my environment, Catfish. I have gotten catfish in November one year and we were eating a bunch of them by May and some of those were over a pound. Here in Florida I've gotten advanced catfish fingerlings (over 5 inches) and had them get quite big in only one year (anywhere from 2-6 lb in one year and the one we kept for two full years made it to 10 pounds.)
I haven't grown them myself but if you must have fin fish you might look into blue gill for a species that is native/local and able to survive your climate. They might take longer to grow out but some people swear they are the best eating out there.
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