9. Stocking your pond with baby fish

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Growing your own baby fish
Feeding the fish in your nursery pond
Using your baby fish
Transporting your baby fish
Putting baby fish into your pond

223 When you are ready to start growing fish you may get the baby fish from a fish culture station or from another fish farmer.

224 If you build more ponds and make your farm bigger, you will need more baby fish than you did before.

225 If you are using tilapia you will need to stock two baby fish for each square metre of pond.

226 If your pond is 20 by 20 metres or 400 square metres you will need 400 x 2 = 800 baby fish.

227 To make sure that you have enough baby fish to stock your ponds, you should grow your own.

Figure 135

Growing your own baby fish

228 You may find that it is best to grow your own baby fish. It is easier and cheaper than getting them from a fish culture station or another fish farmer.

229 Also, if you are going to improve your fish farm by building more ponds, it is better to have your own supply of baby fish.

230 When you grow your own baby fish, you will always be sure to have enough of them when you need them for your big pond.

231 To grow your own baby fish, you will need a nursery pond. You can use an old small pond as a nursery pond or you can build a new nursery pond.

232 A nursery pond can be built just like a big pond, but since the nursery pond is smaller the banks need not be as high or as wide.

233 You can build your nursery pond with an inlet, outlet and overflow like those you used in your big pond.

Figure 136

234 You will also need a crib to hold the fertilizer in your nursery pond.

235 If you build your nursery pond next to your big pond so that they share a bank, you will only need to build three new banks for it.

236 If you grow baby fish near your pond, you will not have to carry them far so they will not be hurt by carrying.

237 Fill your nursery pond with water and fertilize it with compost, animal manure or plant material as you did with your big pond. Wait for the water to turn green.

238 Now you are ready to put fully grown male and female fish into your nursery pond.

Figure 137

239 Be careful to put the right number of male fish and female fish into your nursery pond. The drawing shows you how to see the difference between male and female tilapia.

240 If you are using a pond of 10 by 10 metres as a nursery pond and you are using Tilapia nilotica, you will need to put 20 fully grown male fish and 80 fully grown female fish into the pond.

Figure 138

Figure 139

Feeding the fish in your nursery pond

241 The fully grown fish in your nursery pond will get much of their food from small plants and animals grown in the green water.

242 When the baby fish are born they will be very, very small and at first they will get all of their food from small plants and animals that grow in the green water.

243 These plants and animals are so small that they can hardly be seen or they cannot be seen at all. But if the water is green in your nursery pond, you can be sure that they are there.

244 So you must always be very careful that the water in your nursery pond stays green so that your baby fish will have enough to eat.

245 To keep the water green, do not forget to put a bucket of fertilizer in the crib in your nursery pond each week. If you are using plant compost or plant material, keep the crib filled to the water line.

246 To keep the full-grown fish in your nursery pond healthy, you must also feed them other kinds of food.

Figure 140

247 When the baby fish begin to grow, they, too, will eat the other kinds of food.

248 You can give the fish in your nursery pond many things to eat. But you must be sure that this food is ground or cut very small so that the baby fish can swallow it.

249 You can give the fish in your nursery pond termites or finely ground

250 The bigger your baby fish grow, the more food they will need. Feed your fish well but be careful not to overfeed. Check how much they eat (see also items 287 to 297).

251 If you see that the fish do not eat all of their food, give them a little less the next day. If you see that the fish eat all of their food very quickly, give them a little more the next day.

Figure 141

Using your baby fish

252 After about three months, there will be many baby fish of different sizes in your pond. Then you can begin to take baby fish out of your nursery pond to put into your big pond.

253 Use baby fish that are 5 centimetres or longer to put into your big pond. If there are many baby fish that are 5 centimetres or longer, choose the biggest ones.

254 The easiest way to take out your baby fish is to use a seine net. If you use a seine net with a mesh size of about 1 centimetre the smaller fish will swim through and you will catch the fish of 5 centimetres or longer. But be sure to put the fully grown fish back in your nursery pond.

255 From now on, you can take baby fish out of your nursery pond each month for your own use or to sell.

256 Be careful that your nursery pond does not become too full of fish. If there are too many fish, they will not grow well and your baby fish will not be strong and healthy.

Figure 142

257 To keep your nursery pond from becoming too full of fish, drain all of the water out of the pond each year and collect all of the fish.

258 You can eat the big fish that were in the nursery pond. Items 340 to 351 will tell you what to do with the baby fish.

259 Wait until the bottom of the nursery pond is dry, then clean and repair the bottom and the banks. Items 353 to 355 will tell you how.

260 Now fill the nursery pond with water and fertilize it as you did before. When the water is green, put in the right number of fully grown female fish and male fish. Item 240 tells you how many fully grown fish to use.

Figure 143

Figure 144

261 In about three months, you will be able to take more baby fish out of your nursery pond.

Transporting your baby fish

262 You must be very careful when you carry your baby fish from one place to another. Baby fish can be hurt easily.

263 When you take the baby fish out of your nursery pond using a seine net, do not carry them in the seine net. Carry them in a container such as a clay pot with a cover a bucket with a lid a plastic bag.

264 When you carry baby fish, you must be careful to use only clean water keep the fish out of the sun or cover the container with a wet cloth to keep it cool.

Figure 145

Figure 146

265 If you carry your baby fish in plastic bags, carry the bags in a box so that they will not break. Cover the box and the plastic bags with a wet cloth to keep them cool.

266 If you see that the baby fish are gasping for air, put some air into the water from time to time by splashing the water gently with your hand. Replace some of the old water by well aerated, new water.

Figure 147

Figure 148

Putting baby fish into your pond

267 When your big pond is full of water and you have fertilized it and the water has become green enough, you are ready to put in the baby fish.

268 You already know that if you use tilapia, you will need two baby fish that are 5 centimetres or longer for each square metre of pond.

269 Put the baby fish gently into your pond.

Figure 149

Summary
YOU HAVE LEARNED HOW TO PUT BABY FISH INTO EACH POND

You will need two tilapias per mē of pond area

Use only strong baby fish at least 5 cm long

Obtain baby fish from a government station or another farmer

You can easily produce your own baby tilapias:

Transport baby fish with care:

Gently put your strongest baby fish in the pond.


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