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15 votes
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Bearded Rob Bob gives a run down on growing your own veg and fish in an aquaponics system
15 votes -
Harnessing Iceland's geothermal energy for agriculture | Focus on Europe
2 votes -
Has anyone built a backyard greenhouse before? I'm looking for inspiration, tips, and critiques!
I'm in zone 4b so it gets frigid here in winter, I'm thinking wood burning stove and I bought the thickest double walled plastic panels for the roof that I could find. I'm just finishing an...
I'm in zone 4b so it gets frigid here in winter, I'm thinking wood burning stove and I bought the thickest double walled plastic panels for the roof that I could find. I'm just finishing an insulated slab and I'm about to start framing. Please share with me any photos, plans, or guidance you might have! I have no idea what I'm doing!
21 votes -
Giant California greenhouse signals a big bet on cannabis legalization
4 votes -
High tech meets agriculture in Denmark – strategic investments mean country may one day become a major exporter of farming technology
3 votes -
Is this giant greenhouse in Kentucky the future of farming?
6 votes -
Future greenhouse ambitions
I don't have the land to do it yet, but my dream is to build a year-round greenhouse in a back yard, so that I can have green all throughout the monochromatic bleakness of a New York winter. This...
I don't have the land to do it yet, but my dream is to build a year-round greenhouse in a back yard, so that I can have green all throughout the monochromatic bleakness of a New York winter. This is pretty much a daydream at this point, but I'd like to get some feedback from folks in the know.
The feature wish-list is as follows:
- a dug-out trench, shaped like a V with a flat bottom. Thinking something like 12' (or go metric and make it 4m) wide in the middle, with sides at a 60° angle going to ground level (total depth of around 10' or 2.5m)
- a double-paned glass or plexiglass roof, for insulation and lighting
- heating elements in the outer layer of roof, for snow and ice removal
- a space heater, to regulate temperature during the cold months
- an aquaponics tank (probably using goldfish, but possibly tilapia)
- aquaponics grow beds lining the angled sides
- compost-activated biochar beds on the flat part
The idea would be to run the aquaponic outflow to the top of the sloping sides, supporting herbs, leafy greens, and flowers. The runoff collects at the bottom of the slope, where it is returned to the fish tank. The flat surface would be used for root vegetables and bulbs like onions and garlic.
I realize that this is a tad ambitious (and that I may just be throwing the biochar bit because I think its cool), but part of why I'm posting this is to get the benefit of collective experience. Any thoughts?
4 votes