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Originally Posted by JasPR I think you can appreciate what I said earlier about a large filter that can not accommodate more fish- it is a valuable dilution factor. Plants, especially floating plants house bacteria as much as any other surface.
And Carl, thanks for your response. I regret that I didn't make my points in your regard. But honestly, the INNOVATION is there, in the evolution of the fundamental concept of managing a closed system. This is why I said that those of a newer orientation are at a disadvantage as they have no grasp of the big picture and therefore lack perspective- this is an incubator for innocent arrogance. So plenty of INNOVATION from the raw stand pipe to bottom drain that delivers waste to an isolation sump or vortex. And then the answer unit and the rotating sceen and the auto flush and the --- ect. All part of the same big picture concept. Perhaps you are confusing yourself with the logic of what I'm saying? And perhaps you are thinking about other systems that don't involve biological principles like the way we communicate today compared to twenty years ago? Communication, medicine, manufacturing have all changed. But people still use their ears to listen and voice to speak. And people still die of infection just as they did in the caves. And we still make things- just more things , more efficiently.
A koi pond is a giant, living digestive tract. This biology doesn't change. And because it is located outside, changing it would be like changing all the rules of surrounding nature. Even if you do no seeding of your new system whatsoever,the same species will come, only the start up and dominance will take longer- but it will wind up in the same place eventually ( if conditions are right). So we do not dominate anything- we influence it. And the principle is always the same- inorganic and organic waste management by encouraging an environment that is biologically conditioned by microbes that are also compatible with koi. So innovating ways to make this all more efficient and reliable is where my hubris lies. Fighting these realities due to lack of understanding and using bandaid upon bandaid or products to address one break down in the chain ( and actually gaining some level of success over that one breakdown) is where the innocent arrogant does harm. Not to themselves necessiarly, but to the hundreds that read this success in the moment as a 'new way' of ignoring the rules of nature. - JR |
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JR
I understood the syllogism of your argument, it is your premise that I reject. I am not taking the position that Dr. Novak's system has any merit. I don't know that it does or doesn't. The hubris lies in believing that we completely understand how the biological processes work, and that we cannot find different ways to take advantage of their function outside of the “traditional” koi pond system. Unlike in the examples of mass communications, etc., we did not create that technology, we are merely observers.
Even in the area of biological processes there is human innovation. We have utilized and improved strains of bacteria to consume oil slicks. That happens out in vast oceans, yet it can still be effective. There can be innovations in the utilization of biological function. For instance, it happens in waste management. NASA doesn’t experiment with water plants in waste management out of “innocent arrogance.” They are striving to expand our knowledge base and do not accept the status quo.
I realize that waste management is not the same as keeping koi, but is it really possible that in all human endeavors it makes sense to continue to try to find improvements and alternative methods to achieve better results, but in the koi hobby we have achieved perfection and there is no point in experimentation with other approaches? In mild terms, that sounds rather unlikely.
You state “the principle is always the same- inorganic and organic waste management by encouraging an environment that is biologically conditioned by microbes that are also compatible with koi.” Is it so outrageous to suppose that the same may be achieved by the utilization of plants or alternative bacteria, even if engineered? In fact, don’t we know that it is certainly possible to do so but that there are limitations in terms of practicality and scale? Is it impossible that the limitations of practicality and scale be resolved thru innovation? Haven't we resolved the limitations of practicality and scale of the the bacteria presently utlilized in our ponds by the creation of biomedia that can house larger volumes of bacteria in a smaller amount of space?
We know plants can process ammonia, is it impossible to devise a way to do so in an effective manner that can be practical for use with koi ponds, as we did for the bacteria? Perhaps it is. I guess that I am just too innocent and not arrogant enough to believe that in my lifetime we have found the one best solution for just about anything.
I am planning two koi ponds right now, and both will use traditional koi pond systems, though one may use the streamflow design. Why? Because it is the best system we currently have, and I don't have the inclination to do any experimentation with these ponds. However, I don't believe for a minute that improvements will not occur in the future. Perhaps we should resume this discussion in 20 years?
