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Hi Jonathan,
The general rule of thumb is if you want to grow commercially, go with raft based, and if you want to grow as a backyard gardener, go with media based. Raft is going to give you more production of both fish and plants and is easier to maintain as a large system, but is more complex to build (needs clarifiers to remove solids, for example) and needs to have solids removed at least daily. Media based systems are simple to build, and there are free guides on the net - search for barrelponics - and they can be build inexpensively out of recycled materials. And you can grow a wider variety of plants in media, and never have to remove the solids from your bed.
Both the UVI short course and the course taught by Nelson and Pade are excellent, but are focused on raft based, commercial systems. I"m not familiar with the course in San Diego or the Friendly AP in Hawaii course, but I'm with you - how good do they need to be to justify a trip to San Diego or Hawaii? (I'm going to send quickly before my husband sees that ;-)
Hi Jonathan,
The general rule of thumb is if you want to grow commercially, go with raft based, and if you want to grow as a backyard gardener, go with media based. Raft is going to give you more production of both fish and plants and is easier to maintain as a large system, but is more complex to build (needs clarifiers to remove solids, for example) and needs to have solids removed at least daily. Media based systems are simple to build, and there are free guides on the net - search for barrelponics - and they can be build inexpensively out of recycled materials. And you can grow a wider variety of plants in media, and never have to remove the solids from your bed.
Both the UVI short course and the course taught by Nelson and Pade are excellent, but are focused on raft based, commercial systems. I"m not familiar with the course in San Diego or the Friendly AP in Hawaii course, but I'm with you - how good do they need to be to justify a trip to San Diego or Hawaii? (I'm going to send quickly before my husband sees that ;-)
I think by "slug" you actually meant sludge? If there is sludge building up in the bottom of the raft tanks, then there is a good chance that it is going to be using up dissolved oxygen that you would rather let your plants and fish use. Also, there is some risk that if you stir up that sludge, you could release hydrogen sulfide and other not so good stuff into the water which can be responsible for fish kills if adequate degassing is not in place before the water gets back to the fish tank.
However, this is always a matter of degree. There is often a small amount of fine suspended solids that can make it through a system. How bad something is can be hard to tell from a note on the internet. Chances are if the sludge building up in the bottom of the raft tanks is going to be really bad, it will also be building up on the plant roots and you will be able to see it gumming up the roots, if it is doing that, you can expect that the plants may not do as well as they would otherwise.
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