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Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Mon Mar 28, 2016 8:10 pm
by SandyM
Either way you look at it, eating fish has its pros and cons. Farmed fish is quite the environmental disaster but so is our fish consumption and fishing practice on the large scale. Over fishing is destroying our oceans.
Farmed fish are fed antibotics, hormones, GMO corn and soy. Tilapia is without a doubt the worst tragedy when it comes to farmed fish, but seeing as the US just approved GMO salmon, it looks like tilapia has some competition. You're hard pressed to find ethical, hormone and antibotic free farmed fish. However, it's not impossible. Whole Foods in Ontario sources farmed fish that is free of GMO feed, but still fed unnatural items like corn, and free of synthetic hormones and antibotics. It's actually a prison that has the program.

When eating fish, it definitely is a challenge to choose one with the lesser evil.
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Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Mon Mar 28, 2016 9:12 pm
by TomK
Why is it that somebody in the middle of the continent hundreds if not thousands of miles from the ocean expects readily available seafood?...am I the only one that sees the incredible folly or even arrogance in this?...that's a rhetorical, btw...

Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Mon Mar 28, 2016 9:18 pm
by ross
Must be an app for that . Instant society . Luck

Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Tue Mar 29, 2016 9:43 am
by Killerbunny
I couldn't believe some idiot dietician extolling the benefits of grouper!!!! The fish takes 20 years to get to near breeding size but the locals are being encouraged to market them. Tourists seem quite happy to eat fish that are threatened. On a side note in the Caribbean where accidentally introduced Lionfish have become a problem they have the "eat 'em to beat 'em" campaign which is helping.

Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Tue Mar 29, 2016 10:56 am
by ross
Maybe this is why KB . Different type than your thinking.

Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Tue Mar 29, 2016 11:26 am
by Killerbunny
Unfortunately in the Caribbean it's not so closely monitored. Also parrotfish were a fad a few years back. The other reason to avoid Grouper and Chilean Seabass is possible contaminants including mercury. Many of the long lived fish concentrate the contaminants up the food chain. Like in some of the northern lakes where mercury occurs naturally. Happily for me I don't like fish much!

Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Tue Mar 29, 2016 8:33 pm
by JimW
I will stick with my personally caught fresh water fish, even if some of it comes from Lake Ontario. Those in the future I might need to develop a taste for Asian Carp.

Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2016 12:03 pm
by Bakers Backyard
haha Jim, at least the Asian carp will jump right into your boat... no rod required ;)

Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2016 12:26 pm
by thegawd
I soooooo hope that dosent happen! have there been any recent reports of those fish in our waters?

Fishing At The Farm? Wild or Farmed.

Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2016 1:55 pm
by JP*
I watched a video, by Vice - I think, on YouTube. It showed someone in Mexico farming fish in very large steel enclosures in deep water. Large enough that the fish could swim as a school and avoid making each other sick from parasites. These enclosures were effectively becoming off-shore habitats as other creatures began colonizing them like a shipwreck would be colonized. Little fish, crabs, plants etc.

It seemed like a better option that the plastic bag fish farms in shallow water with little movement.