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​Aquaponics Project

The Beginning of Our Story

1/23/2017

 
​ 
I was in a shabby van, bouncing up and down on the narrow path like a dragon crawling through the thick green forest. We stopped at the front of a rusty wire netting door. The door closed and we were captured in a big cage.
        
In 2016, I went on a service trip in Jamaica to Mustard Seed Community, a residential community for kids with severe illnesses and disabilities. I was shocked when I first saw those children who lived in concrete houses on muddy roads. I had never seen anyone with severe disabilities. Most of them were not able to talk, more than a half had twisted bodies and can only mobilize by wheelchairs. Immediately, I was surrounded by them. Feeling scared, I thought to myself how impossible it would be to hang out with them. In the following week, our group gradually built so in-depth relationships with them that most of the children cried when we were leaving
        
During those unforgettable days in Jamaica, I developed a sense of responsibility to improve the living conditions for those children. Luckily, Mustard Seed provided a chance for me to fulfill. It developed its own agricultural system to be self-sufficient on food supply which included an aquaponics system, a symbiotic environment for fish and vegetables. However, it struggled with technical issues, such as having problems to deal with an excess number of bugs without presticide (which will kill the fish). As a key member in the school science club, I decided to bring these issues to the group building our own aquaponics system under a low budget to simulate the growing process and yield solutions for Mustard Seed. Currently, we are a four-member group with support from the science teachers and Mustard Seed staff. After dealing with complex issues, our system recently made its first successful run.
 
Having a sense of responsibility in mind, we try to convert formulas and knowledge into something tangible that will produce life-changing impacts for others, like the community at Mustard Seed.


Robby Huang

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  • Home
  • Student Research
    • Biodigester Cell
    • Eel Grass Studies
    • Tesla Coil
    • Research Archives >
      • Aquaponics Blog
      • Deep Learning for BCI
      • Wind Energy Research
      • Bioluminesence
      • Essential Oils
  • Lab Visits
    • Lab Visit Archive >
      • Greentown Labs
      • Histogenics
      • MASS CEC
      • MIT Plasma Physics Center
      • Novartis 2017
      • Novartis 2016
      • US GreenBuild - Boston 11/8/17
  • Physics Olympics 18-19
    • Paper Airplanes 17-18
    • Glider Competition 16-17
  • Internships + More
    • Histogenics 2017