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The Rural Voice, 2019-07, Page 27manage the day-to day fish farm operations. It’s a nice balance,” Brady says of the pairing. Indeed, on the basis of interviews with them both, their relationship seems like a marriage made in aquaculture heaven. The hatchery, which itself is nestled in a verdant forest setting on the edge of the property’s serene, languid pond, is quaint and unassuming. Its centrepiece is a one- storey frame building painted forest green and looking very much like its 1960s vintage. It houses 10 rectangular stainless-steel tanks in which eggs are hatched and fry reared, and three round concrete tanks housing fingerlings that are grown to a size where they can be transferred to outdoor raceways. In the external raceways and an additional two metal tanks, the fish are reared to a size when they are ready for market. Regular customers include restaurants, small (100,000 sq. ft.) grocery stores and chains, and ponds and streams stocked by private landowners, Anglers Clubs, and others. Brady and Green market their fish as sustainably and ethically-grown and harvested and say the hatchery causes little adverse environmental impact, a principle to which they are committed. The continuous flow of pristine escarpment spring water makes it possible to rear high-density cultures of fish that are relatively free of the various disorders associated with some other fish farms, in particular, diseases requiring regular doses of antibiotics to control. Gravity compels the continuous flow of water downwards from the Kolapore uplands to the hatchery. Two spring-fed streams run under the forest floor and converge about 500 metres uphill from the hatchery site. The streams, averaging at around seven degrees C, are considerably colder than water at most commercial fish farms, and are optimum for rearing trout. This results in a healthier, firmer-fleshed animal, Green says. In the hatchery the water passes through a series of troughs, tanks and raceways before it exits into the nearby pond “at almost the same temperature it enters the hatchery,” Ten stainless steel tanks are where rainbow trout eggs are hatched and fry reared before they are transferred into three round concrete tanks (above). Once the fingerlings (left) reach the right size, they move into the outdoor raceways (below) and are fed pellets made of fish by-products. The trout also eat the “fairy shrimp” found in the spring water coming off the escarpment. July 2019 23