'Putting my new camera to use around the homestead. My new pond should give me greens all year round, and when I have enough fish I\'ll expand further into outdoor aquaponics & grow all kinds of fruit and veg in the water on floating foam rafts. If this experiment is a success, I plan to put more ponds between the trees in the orchard. I made a path (hand-mixed concrete poured over a hacksawed rebar frame joined with wire) and new raised beds to go with it. Hopefully some of the visiting bees will take up residence in the very basic beehive I put together. It doesn\'t have trays so harvesting of honey is a no-go, but bees need the honey they make to feed their young, so that\'s just fine. Mosquito fish are likely the best fish for hot climate aquaponics systems, especially if you\'re not interested in eating the fish (tho they are edible if you\'re so inclined). They can survive all kinds of calamities unfazed, don\'t need a pump, breed like flies (they\'re one of the few live-bearing fish), and even survive in a few cm of wet mud when the waterways here dry up in the summer. The ideal permaculture fish. Tho I\'m trying other fish in the pond, I\'ve kept mosquito fish most of my life and doubt anything can top them. I sunk holed bricks and cages filled with stones in the pond to allow fry to hide. I also added some driftwood.'
Tags: Solar , self sufficient , waterfall , homesteading , permaculture , apples , beehive , peach , passion fruit , tilapia , koi , goldfish , figs , aquaponics , self sufficiency , water spinach , hydroponics , orchard , kangkong , tree rat , fig tree rat , pink aphids , mosquitofish , mosquito fish , kang kong , japanese land seaweed , watercress , water cress , tomato growing , pond pump , homemade beehive , how to make a beehive , edible pond , pond culture , Rosy Apple Aphid , Raised-bed Gardening
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