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Senin, 18 Juni 2018

Downoad Ebook Aquaponik gardening

by william  |  at  Juni 18, 2018




Aquaponic Gardening is an excellent primer for anyone considering home-scale aquaculture.
Whatever your location or methods, the information should prove invaluable. Fish are
within reach!
— Peter Bane, publisher, Permaculture Activist and author, The Permaculture Handbook
This is a comprehensive handbook on how to grow real food, so meticulously documented, that failure is not an option.
— Jeff Edwards, president, Progressive Gardening Trade Association
I have always wanted to figure out how to do sustainable aquaculture in the context of my
home garden. Finally I’ve got the book to help me do it.
— Paul Greenberg, author, Four Fish:
The Future of the Last Wild Food
This is a delightful book to read! I’ve been involved with hydroponics and aquaculture for
30 years and still learned from reading this very thorough how-to book.
—Henry A. Robitaille, PhD, former general manager, The Land Exhibit, Epcot Center

Learning how to garden through the creation of a completely balanced ecosystem is now
clearly understandable, even to inexperienced gardeners.
—Michael C. Metallo, President and CEO, National Gardening Association
Sylvia Bernstein has provided the “aquapons of the world” with a clear, impassioned, and
elegant “Bible” to spread the good news about aquaponics.
— James J. Godsil, cofounder, Sweet Water Organics, Sweet Water Foundation
The United States is blessed with an abundance of fertile soil in most states that support traditional soil-based agriculture, producing harvests of all types of crops, both for consumption within the USA and for export. In my thirty years of reporting and publishing articles on agriculture around the world, I saw firsthand that other places are not so fortunate. Countries like Australia, New Zealand, Israel and Holland rely on their not-so-fertile soil to act like a foundation base for acreages of hydroponic greenhouses and aquaponic systems to produce enough vegetables and fish to feed their people. Now, with the pressure to produce more food to feed an ever-increasing world population, even countries with abundant areas of fertile soil are looking at both hydroponics and aquaponics to produce fish or food crops both in a faster growth cycle and in more volume in a given space. With the correct inputs, hydroponics and aquaponics systems both fit those demands. Health-conscious consumers also want an increasing quality of food. “Locavores” and “foodies” are terms that didn’t exist ten years ago. But now, all areas of the developed world have large locavore foodie populations along with a growing Slow Food movement that  demands locally grown, fresh produce in the meals they eat, both at home or in restaurants. It matters not whether those tasty food items are grown on a local farm or in a home’s basement or backyard; aquaponics fills the bill for locavore foodies’ demands for freshly harvested, locally grown food.

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