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Lucky you! Pretty great to have a supply of fresh seaweed. You probably won't need an extract for your plants once you have cycled - your fish will do all that work - however, I'm wondering if the seaweed might be a nice feed supplement for your fish. I've taken to feeding my tilapia the stringy algae from our decorative water feature, and they love it. You would need to wash off the excess salt but, depending on the fish you grow, it might be something you can use to extend your feed dollar and round out their diet.
I lived 16 years in total in the Caribbean on three different islands and visited many others. Which one you live on? Most of my family is still in St. Barth, but I'm in Montreal now. I'm trying to interest my son, who is still there, in trying aquaponics.
I am planning to go this winter. I have financial considerations these days. I am well aware of where Trinidad is. I lived not far away in St. Lucia for three years from 1969-1972. Before the Caribbean changed forever with the influx of tourism.
I always wanted to see carnival in Trinidad too. Is that still a big deal?
St. Barth is a dessert island that depends on a desalinization plant for fresh water for the community that is within the range of their pumping system or else you pay trucks to ship it to you. It is a tiny millionaire's playground where everything is imported. Fresh fruit and vegetables are notoriously expensive. Because of sigitara (sp? fish ailment) many fish are dangerous to eat. During the second world war the island was not touristic at all and very poor. If the islanders had not traded with the German subs they would have starved to death. I can imagine those times coming again. Many little Caribbean islands are like ST. Barth in that they are not high enough to catch the clouds and make the rain fall with any consistency. I think the people that live there year round should be thinking about AP.
I always wanted to see carnival in Trinidad too. Is that still a big deal?
St. Barth is a dessert island that depends on a desalinization plant for fresh water for the community that is within the range of their pumping system or else you pay trucks to ship it to you. It is a tiny millionaire's playground where everything is imported. Fresh fruit and vegetables are notoriously expensive. Because of sigitara (sp? fish ailment) many fish are dangerous to eat. During the second world war the island was not touristic at all and very poor. If the islanders had not traded with the German subs they would have starved to death. I can imagine those times coming again. Many little Caribbean islands are like ST. Barth in that they are not high enough to catch the clouds and make the rain fall with any consistency. I think the people that live there year round should be thinking about AP.
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