You don't have to buy these boxes, the instructions are also great for making do it yourself grow boxes. It's both practical and affordable, even for city-people who don't own a house or a garden. Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, gives very useful down to earth advice here.
Plants are grown as in hydroponics systems, with their roots immersed in the nutrient-rich effluent water. This enables them to filter out the ammonia that is toxic to the aquatic animals, or its metabolites. After the water has passed through the hydroponic subsystem, it is cleaned and oxygenated, and can return to the aquaculture vessels. This cycle is continuous. Common aquaponic applications of hydroponic systems include:
Deep-water raft aquaponics: styrofoam rafts floating in a relatively deep aquaculture basin in troughs.
Recirculating aquaponics: solid media such as gravel or clay beads, held in a container that is flooded with water from the aquaculture. This type of aquaponics is also known as closed-loop aquaponics.
Reciprocating aquaponics: solid media in a container that is alternately flooded and drained utilizing different types of siphon drains. This type of aquaponics is also known as flood-and-drain aquaponics or ebb-and-flow aquaponics. Other systems use towers that are trickle-fed from the top, nutrient film technique channels, horizontal PVC pipes with holes for the pots, plastic barrels cut in half with gravel or rafts in them. Each approach has its own benefits. Most green leaf vegetables grow well in the hydroponic subsystem, although most profitable are varieties of Chinese cabbage, lettuce, basil, roses, tomatoes, okra, cantaloupe and bell peppers.
Other species of vegetables that grow well in an aquaponic system include beans, peas, kohlrabi, watercress, taro, radishes, strawberries, melons, onions, turnips, parsnips, sweet potato and herbs. Since plants at different growth stages require different amounts of minerals and nutrients, plant harvesting is staggered with seedings growing at the same time as mature plants. This ensures stable nutrient content in the water because of continuous symbiotic cleansing of toxins from the water.
Includes:
videos:
Amazing aquaponics! Health Ranger tours Sand Creek Farm in central Texas
Amazing device pumps well water using compressed air! (Health Ranger in Ecuador)
DIY_ How to make your own Food Rising Mini-Farm Grow Box (part 2)
Food Rising 3D printer object building demo with the Health Ranger
Food Rising Mini-Farm Grow Box full assembly instructions
Food Rising Mini-Farm Grow Box official launch video
Health Ranger unveils Food Rising grow system at Health Freedom Expo in Naples, FL, Feb 21 2015
Interview with Farmer Brad about S 510 Food Safety Modernization Act
Saguaro Cactus Fruit picking with David Wolfe and the Health Ranger
The Missing Piece of the Food Storage Puzzle (Health Ranger)
Weeds as medicine
ebooks:
Agri Aquaculture.pdf
Aquaculture Permaculture.pdf
Aquaponics.pdf
Backyard Aquaponics Manual.pdf
Backyard Liberty.pdf
Barrel-ponics Aquaponics.pdf
Gardening.pdf
Guide to Developing a Business Plan for Farms.pdf
Home Hydroponics.pdf
Sustain Aqua Handbook.pdf
The Urban Aquaponic Manual.pdf
Urban Aquaponics Manual.pdf
Veggie Growing Guide in Western Australia.pdf
Hobby Hydroponics.pdf
How-to Hydroponics.pdf
Hydrofarm 2013 Catalog.pdf
Hydroponic Food Production A Definitive Guidebook.pdf
Hydroponics - Getting Started Everything You Need to Know.pdf