I love that you have a list of topics! I love that you kept on topic, and not a lot of "filler words" Overall a great job! One thing - I'm new to everything, so checking something "Regularly" is not clear to me approx what time frame. 3 days, a week, or how often ? Not trying to make trouble. Really like this video.
Thank you. you gave me the inspiration to get started. I have like 4 300 gallon tanks like 4 feet wide I have been dying to purpose. I'm afraid I'll cave and not kill them. I'm a sucker for all living things.
If you start a flood-n-drain bed above the tank, that can hedge your power cut issue on getting oxygen to your tank. Even a small pump can work off a battery to flood the bed and when it siphons out the splashing will introduce needed oxygen. My two cents Keep up the good work!
Thanks for the suggestion. That pribably would work. I guess what I am really struggling to figure out is how to have it trigger to turn on when the main power shuts off.
Hey Jeff W. Can you describe your idea a little clearer please?? I was just talk about a raised mini wetland idea that maybe emptied into the tank....in theory providing clean oxygenated water at the same time.....is that what your talking about??
@@idratherbehomesteading2632 Just have a double pole double throw relay that's normally energized by the 120V power, and use the normally closed contacts to power the battery pump. When the 120V power drops out, the battery power device will instantly kick in. If 120V power comes back on, the battery power switches off again.
Hi thanks for your shareing. I do small aquaponic and use solar ups energy about 2kva which can charge either gride or solar. And it work great for me. I also just start about one year now, my experience is also same as your.
The lifepo4 batteries are absolutely being given away at about $175 a piece just get you a nice decent inverter and you don't even need the solar panels those life pole for batteries come with a DC charger so if your power is only going to be down for a few hours one or two of those batteries will last for days on a pool pump.. get at least a hundred amp hours each... They work fantastic
Get a duracell powersource. Run stuff through it. Should give you plenty of power to make it through a power outage. Also already has plugs that you can connect solar panel to it.
I do very small scale aquaponics for lettuce etc with minnows out of a couple of 10 gallon aquariums. When it comes to chlorine in the water l top off with water I’ve let set overnight to gas off the chlorine from a 5 gallon bucket. I assume this is ok I’ve never had a problem.
Murray hallam has a good battery back up system. He has a bunch of videos on RU-vid, great course & store that sells his back up system which he created for his aquaponics farm. Hope this helps
Velli intalesting. Have been wanting to do aquaponics but do not want to jump into it. Just raising catfish alone may be the answer. What do you feed them, other than the plants and where can you purchase the feed? Am building a Walapini and want to put the fish tank inside for temp control as I live in southern new mexico and temps get low in winter.
Back up battery whether 12volt on its own or a redundant solar 2x's emergency backup should be plenty for a 24-48hr backup. Yes, even your large kiddy pool.... .lol Don't overload your pool & that alone would help. But, regardless, the above backup is what's commonly used for such setups. Saltwater aquariums w/several thousands of $$ worth of live coral use battery backup systems. Yes, I'm speaking of 29g-500gln.
Wall mart sells a powerstrip/500watt battery. Over by the computers and tv's. Apc by Schneider electronics. 50$. It can run airpumps for a long time. Manual air exchange method: Two 5gal buckets. Repeatedly poor from one bucket to the other (boxing the water). Then add to fish home. This buys you about 4 hrs on a 200 gal system. So go back and box another 4 gallons every few hrs.
Hey your welcome I am glad you enjoyed it. If you are referring to a ram pump that will not work in this situation. If you have a different tyoe of pump in mind I'd be interested to see it if you have a link you can share
Besides water hyacinth and water lettuce, try pothos, they are easy to find and do really well and spread really fast in a pond, just make sure they are bare rooted; I put them in a plant basket made for pond and use small rocks to weigh them down and fish will not eat pothos. I also use pothos on all my fish tank hanging off the side of the tank, just the roots in the water and they don't need direct sun light to grow. I don't know how your water hyacinth and water lettuce are growing without direct sunlight, they need minimum 4 to 6 hours of sun light and do even better with all day sunlight. Many other house plants can be used as well such as Tradescantia known as Jew plant and Oyster plant, syngonium also known as arrowhead, aluminium plant, and elephant ears, just to name a few, and yes, I have used all of them and they all work really well, just make sure they are barerooted and these plants don't need direct sun light.
Thanks for the tip I will check into that. My plants get an hour or two of direct sunlight and then a strong indirect sunlight for a couple hours before shade the rest of the day. I guess they find that to be enough for them
Is the Jew plant purple??.... Sorry....I know this is an old reply regarding different plants that you can use bare root for oxygen for fish!! Trying to figure a cheaper method because all the pumps I can find are expensive....plus I like the idea of off grid anyways!!...
@@davidschmidt270 Any Alocasia especially Taro and also Colocasia, very few of the elephant ears do not like wet feet, so when you buy the bulbs, read the description.
@@davidschmidt270 Wandering Jew plants are Tradescantia and they come in many different colors and yes, even purple. Most of these plants are used to filter the water, if you want oxygenated plants, use water hyacinth and water lettuce, they clean the water as well as providing oxygen. These plants do use Oxygen as well at night time, and give out oxygen during the day. If you have large size fish, I would recommend using pumps as filter along side with plants. If you have large surface area of water like lakes and large ponds, you can get away without using filter.
Hey bro. You can also pre fill buckets and leave it out in the sun so chlorine can evaporate. Most water has chloramine now so you gotta watch out for that too. I think vitamin c takes out the chloramine.
Yeah I used to do that, and I also used the chlorine removing liquid. That worked ok when I only had the small 150 gallon tank, but when I went up to the large tank and needed to do water changes of hundreds of gallons that was not a viable solution any longer.
I dont know if youre tech savvy but you could hypothetically buy a raspberry pi, an oxygen sensor, and a relay and write your own script to turn on said relay if your water oxygen level drops to a certain percentage.
@@idratherbehomesteading2632 don't get me wrong Mister, makes sense....I guess what I was looking for would be a real hardy breed that would need less oxygen than most...a type that can live in City water no problem
City water can be fine so long as you remove the chlorine and chloramine before use. But it still needs oxygen. That can come from pumps, air stones, and/or plants. I have another subscriber who says he is using enough plants they don't need a pump.