I cut a vent in the roof and will begin building a housing to eventually contain an exhaust fan. A custom shade cloth has been ordered to use whenever the sun is out to protect the plants (otherwise they start wilting in the direct sun). I'm currently trying out some 1" PVC to make curtain tracks that will attach to the bows to raise and lower the shade cloth and the insulation cover in the winter.
The bio filter functioning and the latest measurements have shown a little more than 5ppm nitrates. The water has been circulating for over three weeks without adding fresh water.
We are waiting on Santiam Ranch to get back with us for an order of about 30 new fish. If those thrive we'll add more in a few weeks. We are still growing greens, but slower than it should take.
As we intend to get organically certified I am unable to use antibiotics to save them. We started dunking them daily in a salt bath (1/2C salt / gallon water) about two weeks ago. Of the approximately 300 original fish, 62 remain. We've only lost a few during the past week or so, so the outbreak may be coming under control.
I've been transferring the fish to a new tank with fresh spring water after each bath and dumping and cleaning the other tank. I've also been adding a bit of salt to the new tank water (a couple of ppt). The plants in the rafts are growing very slowly since there are almost no nutrients (still have some mosquito fish in the troughs and the spring water has a bit of nitrates in it).
I am still building the bio-filter box and hoping to get some good bacteria growing in the troughs and the unused large tank soon. I'm also dumping new water into the troughs and large tank almost every day, exchanging about half of the volume.
I've added a sink and drain at the far end that required trenching and digging under the footer. A second hole will allow a pipe to go under the footer and down to the creek where it can run through some heat exchange pipe to keep the system water cool if/when needed.
I, unfortunately, ended up draining all of the water from the system (siphoning through hoses) and then refilling due to adding some bleach that was perfumed. A bit irritating :-).
We started about 500 seeds on the nursery table in expectation of the fish arriving. They arrived on Thursday, the 16th, courtesy of the Santiam Valley Ranch.
Nitrifying bacteria has been added, and system values (ph, DO, Ammonia, Nitrites & Nitrates) are being monitored.
Misellaneous chores are getting completed including additional vents (hit 103 even with the fan on when the sun was out). The fish tanks and growing troughs are all filled to capacity with clean water. One cracked fitting and a couple minor leaks were fixed in the process. The circulation pump and air pump are installed and running. All of the rafts are in the troughs. Only half of them have had the net pot holes drilled and painted, but won't be needed until we get some plants growing.
Trenched about 250 feet for electric and water lines from the barn. I Installed a 3/4" water line, a second 3/4" poly pipe with an electric supply wire running through it and a third 3/4" poly pipe with an ethernet line. I re-covered about half of the trenches.
The breaker box, pump outlets, heat mat connections, and several general outlets are installed. Finished the sill plate on the south wall using another six bags of concrete.
The interior support pillars were surface bonded.
Both fish tanks were moved into the building and set in place.
Both troughs are completed except for the liners. The north wall of the sunken aisle greenhouse had the concrete blocks filled with sand and as the weather warmed and dried, it was also surface bonded on one side. I also finished surface bonding the Aqua house outside north and south block walls.
ETFE film and hardware has been ordered and paid, but will not come in for some time. Untill it arrives we'll use standard 6 mil poly. Attached the regular poly greenhouse film, mostly finished closing up the walls and installed the door.
Installed a one-third horsepower squirrel cage fan (that I already had lying around) in the lower east wall to improve air circulation.
The south concrete block wall got tied in with concrete, dry stacked, and surface bonded on the inside.
More construction materials arrived (I was WAY off on the surface bonding cement quantity). The internal support pillars were stacked, filled with concrete and the top plate was connected with J bolts. Two truckloads of sand for the wall cavities arrived, followed by another large truckload of gravel to cover the muddy areas between the Aquahouse and the greenhouses.
I found that the paint over the epoxy on the small fish tank did not adhere well enough after it got wet outside in the rain. I decided it was due to the epoxy surface being too smooth. So I ended up sanding it back off and redoing it.
The largest tank was moved out of the barn workroom to make space to construct the nursery table in the insulated room.
Concrete block, cement glazing, insulation, and lumber arrived courtesy of Copeland Lumber in Newport.
Huge thanks to my neighbor Tom Swinford and Mike Tyler (and of course my daughter Anjia and wife Stephanie) for their robust manual labor that made the pour possible!
I cut a vent in the roof and will begin building a housing to eventually contain an exhaust fan. A custom shade cloth has been ordered to use whenever the sun is out to protect the plants (otherwise they start wilting in the direct sun). I'm currently trying out some 1" PVC to make curtain tracks that will attach to the bows to raise and lower the shade cloth and the insulation cover in the winter.
The bio filter functioning and the latest measurements have shown a little more than 5ppm nitrates. The water has been circulating for over three weeks without adding fresh water.
We are waiting on Santiam Ranch to get back with us for an order of about 30 new fish. If those thrive we'll add more in a few weeks. We are still growing greens, but slower than it should take.
As we intend to get organically certified I am unable to use antibiotics to save them. We started dunking them daily in a salt bath (1/2C salt / gallon water) about two weeks ago. Of the approximately 300 original fish, 62 remain. We've only lost a few during the past week or so, so the outbreak may be coming under control.
I've been transferring the fish to a new tank with fresh spring water after each bath and dumping and cleaning the other tank. I've also been adding a bit of salt to the new tank water (a couple of ppt). The plants in the rafts are growing very slowly since there are almost no nutrients (still have some mosquito fish in the troughs and the spring water has a bit of nitrates in it).
I am still building the bio-filter box and hoping to get some good bacteria growing in the troughs and the unused large tank soon. I'm also dumping new water into the troughs and large tank almost every day, exchanging about half of the volume.
I've added a sink and drain at the far end that required trenching and digging under the footer. A second hole will allow a pipe to go under the footer and down to the creek where it can run through some heat exchange pipe to keep the system water cool if/when needed.
I, unfortunately, ended up draining all of the water from the system (siphoning through hoses) and then refilling due to adding some bleach that was perfumed. A bit irritating :-).
We started about 500 seeds on the nursery table in expectation of the fish arriving. They arrived on Thursday, the 16th, courtesy of the Santiam Valley Ranch.
Nitrifying bacteria has been added, and system values (ph, DO, Ammonia, Nitrites & Nitrates) are being monitored.
Misellaneous chores are getting completed including additional vents (hit 103 even with the fan on when the sun was out). The fish tanks and growing troughs are all filled to capacity with clean water. One cracked fitting and a couple minor leaks were fixed in the process. The circulation pump and air pump are installed and running. All of the rafts are in the troughs. Only half of them have had the net pot holes drilled and painted, but won't be needed until we get some plants growing.
Trenched about 250 feet for electric and water lines from the barn. I Installed a 3/4" water line, a second 3/4" poly pipe with an electric supply wire running through it and a third 3/4" poly pipe with an ethernet line. I re-covered about half of the trenches.
The breaker box, pump outlets, heat mat connections, and several general outlets are installed. Finished the sill plate on the south wall using another six bags of concrete.
The interior support pillars were surface bonded.
Both fish tanks were moved into the building and set in place.
Both troughs are completed except for the liners. The north wall of the sunken aisle greenhouse had the concrete blocks filled with sand and as the weather warmed and dried, it was also surface bonded on one side. I also finished surface bonding the Aqua house outside north and south block walls.
ETFE film and hardware has been ordered and paid, but will not come in for some time. Untill it arrives we'll use standard 6 mil poly. Attached the regular poly greenhouse film, mostly finished closing up the walls and installed the door.
Installed a one-third horsepower squirrel cage fan (that I already had lying around) in the lower east wall to improve air circulation.
The south concrete block wall got tied in with concrete, dry stacked, and surface bonded on the inside.
More construction materials arrived (I was WAY off on the surface bonding cement quantity). The internal support pillars were stacked, filled with concrete and the top plate was connected with J bolts. Two truckloads of sand for the wall cavities arrived, followed by another large truckload of gravel to cover the muddy areas between the Aquahouse and the greenhouses.
I found that the paint over the epoxy on the small fish tank did not adhere well enough after it got wet outside in the rain. I decided it was due to the epoxy surface being too smooth. So I ended up sanding it back off and redoing it.
The largest tank was moved out of the barn workroom to make space to construct the nursery table in the insulated room.
Concrete block, cement glazing, insulation, and lumber arrived courtesy of Copeland Lumber in Newport.
Huge thanks to my neighbor Tom Swinford and Mike Tyler (and of course my daughter Anjia and wife Stephanie) for their robust manual labor that made the pour possible!
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Find out about: America's (now the World's) Favorite Poison By Far!
... " just four companies — Bayer, Corteva (formerly DowDuPont), BASF and Syngenta/ChemChina — controlled 75 percent of plant breeding research, 60 percent of the commercial seed market, and 76 percent of global agrichemical sales in 2019."[78]
Monsanto / Bayer's Roundup Triggers Over 40 Plant Diseases and Endangers Human and Animal Health. Protect yourself and those you care about!
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/argentinasRoundupHumanTragedy.php
http://www.NaturalNews.com/031138_Monsanto_Roundup.html
[78] ETC Group. (2019, April 06). New report: Putting the cartel before the horse…and farm, seeds, soil, peasants. https://www.etcgroup.org/content/new-report-putting-cartel-horse%E2%80%A6and-farm-seeds-soil-peasants
Just Say No To GMO by Michael Adams - Video
https://www.naturalnews.com/NoGMO.html Just Say No To GMO by Michael Adams - Music https://oregonTruffleTryst.com/_MEDIA/JustSayNoToGMO-192.mp3 Song Lyrics
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