Carey: Get you fish going and when things stabilize, add your hydroponics side of your system. The biggest problem most beginners face is rushing into things before the system is ready.
To which a sicko thread jacker replied: Carey, I think I should disagree with the aquaculture first side; the plants are the main attraction. So, I'm copying this over to the threadjackers page for future discussion.
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Hay Eric, can you provide a link back to the original thread since I'm feeling a bit lost without context.
Sorry, here's the link.http://aquaponicscommunity.com/profiles/blogs/im-new-to-it-all-let-... It wasn't a huge thread either.
TCLynx said:
Hay Eric, can you provide a link back to the original thread since I'm feeling a bit lost without context.
Well for whatever reason you choose to do aquaponics, that will be the main attraction.
I disagreed with the comment about setting up the fish first and doing the hydroponics later but the reason I disagreed has more to do with the need for filtration that is likely to be missing when thinking of aquaculture and hydroponics as separate yet put together.
I have only cycled without fish once. Every tank after that has recieved "start-up water" from the big demo system or my smaller home system. I've found that if you add 1/4 or more of the initial total system water with established tank water there is no need for anything but to feed the fish until it's time to buffer or add iron. I always add fish to the completed system with no plants for a few days to a week to build nitrates, then when I plant there is fast growth immediately.
I do the same I call it old water. I just add a 5 gal bucket of water from one of the other fish tanks put the fish and the plants in. Some times I cycle it over night and add the fish the next day. I have never had a problem or had to deal with Ammonia spikes unless I had too many fish. I always give my friends a bucket of old water. I know that my fish do not have any diseases so I feel right about giving them the old water. The fish seem to do well,.
Growitright Aquaponics said:
I have only cycled without fish once. Every tank after that has recieved "start-up water" from the big demo system or my smaller home system. I've found that if you add 1/4 or more of the initial total system water with established tank water there is no need for anything but to feed the fish until it's time to buffer or add iron. I always add fish to the completed system with no plants for a few days to a week to build nitrates, then when I plant there is fast growth immediately.
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