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Owned by Omero

Aquaponics Hub

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Connecting & supporting aquaponics enthusiasts. Sharing tips, tutorials & success stories for creating and maintaining a thriving fish‑plant ecosystem

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40 contributions to Aquaponics Hub
Closing the Community
I want to take a moment to thank everyone who joined, shared, commented, and contributed here. This community attracted some thoughtful people and some genuinely solid experience. I’ve appreciated the stories, the honesty about failures, and the willingness a few of you showed to document real systems rather than talk theory. That said, it’s clear there isn’t quite enough momentum or ongoing interest right now to justify keeping this space active in the way it deserves. Rather than letting it quietly drift, I think it’s better to acknowledge that and close things down cleanly. That doesn’t take away from the value of what was shared here. If anything, it confirms something I still believe strongly: aquaponics works best when driven by people actively building, observing, and exchanging in real time. Thank you again for being part of this, even briefly. I genuinely wish you well with your systems, your experiments, and whatever direction you take next. Take care, and keep building.
0 likes • 14d
@Roland Hornsby Hi Roland. I’ll be closing down in a week or so.
What Do You Notice Before Something Breaks?
I was thinking. I’ve noticed over time that aquaponics systems rarely fail all at once. Most of the time, they drift slowly out of balance. The signs are easy to miss at first. When I started, I definitely overestimated how much equipment mattered and underestimated how much value there is in watching or rather, observing the system. That got me curious. If you’ve run a system before, what was the first small sign that told you something wasn’t quite right? And, if you’re still in learning mode (which is completely fine), what’s one part of aquaponics you’d like to understand better when the time comes? What scares you about moving forward (don't say "my partner") 😂 No pressure to reply if you’re just here to read and absorb. That’s a valid place to be. But if you feel like sharing real experiences it helps the community a lot.
1 like • 21d
@Edwin Bomani That’s a very honest take, Edwin. A lot of people learn the same lesson the hard way. Observation comes first, and tools make sense after you’ve seen what can go wrong. Used well, they don’t replace attention, they support it. And you’re right about the hype. Aquaponics only really clicks once you’ve watched it fail, recover, and then suddenly work. Once you see that, it changes how you look at systems altogether.
Diagram of my system
Here's a quick diagram of my system, its in a greenhouse around 5m x 4.5m. I've had it running for several years now, please see previous video.
Diagram of my system
2 likes • 22d
Thanks for sharing this Keith. It’s really helpful to see your system laid out so clearly. I’ll say upfront, I’m a big fan of header tank systems. Using gravity wherever possible just makes life easier, and your setup shows that kind of thinking. It’s calm, logical, and built to keep running rather than needing constant attention. The fact that this has been operating for several years in a Cambridge greenhouse says a lot on its own. Longevity is the real test. Diagrams like this help people get how water actually moves through a system, which is often the hardest part to visualise. If you feel like it, I’d love to hear what you’ve changed over time, or what you’d do differently if you were starting again. This is the kind of practical share that really helps others. Thanks again Keith
What stage are you at right now?
It would be nice to know the mix that we have here.
Poll
9 members have voted
Welcome to new members
A warm welcome to our new members Chris Val (@chris-val-1666) and Jerry Sookhall (@jerry-sooklall-8873). Glad to have you both here. This is a space for real systems, real questions, and honest learning. No pressure to perform or post. When you’re ready, feel free to share what brought you to aquaponics, or just take some time to look around and see what resonates. Cheers
3 likes • 24d
@Chris Val 2026-01-11 That’s a good place to be, Chris. Taking time to understand the basics before building saves a lot of frustration later. Aquaponics rewards patience more than speed. Use this space to observe, ask questions, and see how different people approach their systems. You’ll start to notice what keeps coming up, and what actually matters. When you do decide to build, you’ll be doing it from understanding, not guesswork. By the way, I started with 2 goldfish and a basil seeding at my kitchen window. 😂
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Omero Combi
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@omero-combi-6685
Grow fresh food & fish in self-sustaining systems. Learn, share, and master aquaponics with a supportive, hands-on community

Active 3h ago
Joined Aug 17, 2025
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