Showing posts with label all. Show all posts
Showing posts with label all. Show all posts

Sunday, April 3, 2016

When all the fish are gone

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Here is a great picture and memory:

After a good night’s sleep, you awake to a great sunny morning and reflect upon the wonderful relaxing experience that you enjoyed last night. The memories of that great meal you shared with your special someone rests in your mind. The feeling of comfort and closeness you discovered, over the candle light casting shadows at your secluded table while soft music played, is still fresh in your thoughts.

The seafood was the best choice, it sure made a hit. The succulent flavors blended well with the mood and with the wine, bringing a mutual feeling of pleasure and satisfaction that a good dinner often brings. It was a night to remember, that brought you the same age old enjoyment that good friends, good food and good wine, has done for years. Yes it was great you say. Let us thank the folks that made it possible.

Now Picture this:

You have some slack time and you are wondering around the internet, reading about things that mean something in your life and you are gathering a better understanding of the world. In keeping with your concerns and important issues, the state of the world’s food supply, the quality of food and the price of food are all issues that you read about because you know that they will make an everyday difference in your life. After reading and researching on the subject for awhile you come upon information relating to one of the world’s largest sources of protein and nutritious food, which is fish and seafood.

This maybe is where your bad day starts, as you realize that humankind cannot any longer count on or rely upon wild fish stocks to meet the demands of the future or even satisfy the demands of today.

Perhaps you also wonder where all the fish have gone? If you do, you can also take some satisfaction in knowing that you are not alone. Many of the world’s scientist, governing bodies and think tanks are grappling with the crisis and are searching for alternative ways for making the best of our ocean, river and inland lake fish resources.

It is now written in “factual stones” that the populations of worldwide wild fish and shellfish (stocks) are continuing to be depleted at a rate that surprises even those scientists that made dire predictions a few short years ago. The huge hunting and gathering efforts that has long dominated the World’s supply of seafood are failing. Even with today’s increased overall fishing effort and increased focus upon catching and substituting less desirable fish species, collapse and failure of the wild fishing industry is near, and the lack of sustainability of the fishing effort against available wild supplies is impossible to escape.

Now picture a light:

Once one contemplates the facts and reviews the information it becomes obvious that we should endeavor to do more with what we have and employ a level of husbandry to reduce our reliance upon capture fisheries in the same manner as we reduced our need to hunt and gather other food supplies like grain and animals. Yes I am talking farming.

Fish farming is now supporting over 50% of the entire world’s supply of fish and seafood. The reason for this is very simple, it is the best and most sustainable method to meet the demand that our population creates. Without Aquaculture the wild stocks of fish would have collapsed years ago, as the demand for supply has far outpaced the ability of wild stocks to produce and it has done so for numerous years.

There has been much written of late on the reports of poor populations of many of our fisheries. TAC (total allowable catch) predictions for next year look downright scary. If we continue to ignore solutions to the problem we will continue to have the problem.

If one were to have to "wonder around" today and gather the grains, cereals, poultry, beef and other products needed to ensure survival, it would be a much different world.

In order to meet the demand for high protein foods we have to continue to supplement the available supply by controlled husbandry to help achieve a better yield from a diminishing resource.

Yes we need to continue farming fish and we are learning how to do it much better than before. That learning curve is also called growing, like our plants, animals and fish we have also grown and gained a better understanding of how to do things right, and we will continue to grow and fill the need.

Robert Freeman

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Friday, March 18, 2016

Dorothy Day A Model for All Catholics

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From National Catholic Reporter

During his address to the US Congress on Sept. 24, Pope Francis cited Dorothy Day as a model for all Catholics. Who was this remarkable woman, who brought community to so many in need?  

Dorothy Day asks us: Isn’t this love the sacred center we seek in prayer, celebrate in the Eucharist, try to express in community outreach to those in need? If we are hospitable, will we not make everyone feel welcome, especially the stranger and even our enemies? If we have differences, can we not simply talk to one another? Don’t we all hunger for respect within the community and for meaningful, purposeful lives? If we expose our common vulnerabilities and shared sufferings, will we not, as occasion arises, practice the corporal works of mercy for one another? If we start small, do what we can where we are, will not the circle of our concern expand gracefully and naturally?

Read full article by Patrick Marrin in Celebration Publications

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Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Why Round is Better All Around

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Just because I havent been blogging doesnt mean I havent been busy.  It means I have been too busy to blog!

Here in South Florida, what every one else calls winter is what we call our growing season.  It is the only time when temperatures, humidity levels, and rainfall all fall back into levels that support hearty and healthy plant growth.

In our own aquaponic systems we have mints, onions, peppers, tomatoes, brussels sprouts, eggplant, arugula and endive chugging along.  In soil we have tomatoes and peppers.  Each and everyone has appeared to have had a very merry Christmas and are starting off the new year great.

Things werent the same over at the Together We Stand gardens.  The aerator to the fish tanks gave up the ghost. Fish croaked (and these fish are tilapia not croakers - a totally different fish but I digress).  Ammonia levels spiked. Fish croaked.  Ammonia levels went higher.  Well you get the picture.  We were stuck in a closed loop of high ammonia levels and dead fish.  Significant water changes were only making a marginal difference.  We lost over 60 fish in one day!  At this rate, this aquaponic garden was not going to survive.  It was time for detective work.

We started with what we knew to be true.  Aeration had been restored.  Dissolved oxygen should not be the culprit. Even after a couple of 60% water changes ammonia levels continued to be off the charts. The fish were not being fed so they werent making the ammonia and after removing the dead fish the levels did not come down.  There had to be something we were missing....and there was.

The fish tanks in use are designed with grooves on the inside for placing dividers.  The bottom of the tank is a series of three inverted pyramids.  This is supposed to allow the grower to divide the tank into three areas to separate fish of different sizes.  If you dont understand the description, here is a picture (which should be good for at least 1,000 words).
In reality what this actually does is provide a very deep area in which something like a dead fish can settle. Yes folks, that is what turned out to be the source of our ammonia problem.  After draining the tanks down  to about 25% we were able to see the 13 dead fish that had settled in those inverted pyramids.  When the aerator failed, not all the fish that died had floated. Some had settled and that was the source of the ammonia.  Once those areas were cleaned and the tanks refilled, the ammonia levels  went down and stayed down. I dont want to live those 2 days again.  But, with the mystery solved on the third day we were back on track. 

Dr. James Rakocy, the father of aquaponics has always advocated for round fish tanks.  You cant hide in the corners if there arent any corners.  Now even though these tanks have radius corners at the edges, they still have corners of a sort on the bottom.  So to the adage that tanks should be round, lets add that they should have flat bottoms.

After all, how can your garden survive if the fish themselves cant survive?

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