Chapter V, 



" Withholding facts is robbery." 



Orville Dewev. 



ABOUT FISH-PONDS IN GENERAL. 



■ A basin of water in the open air, so arranged or constructed that 

 the water may be drawn ofif at any desired time, is called a pond. A 

 body of water not under control, in the full sense of the word, is 

 usually known as a pool or a lake. The dimension of such body of 

 water does not necessarily regulate the name applied to it, as for 

 instance, a pond may either be but a few feet in length and breadth, 

 or it may cover an estate of hundreds of acres in extent, just as the 

 requirements of the case may be. 



In countries far removed from the sea-shore, or any other natural 

 source from which fish may be obtained in large quantities, the 

 necessity arises for supplying the want by some means or other. 

 This can only be done by cultivating them on a large scale, and in 

 quantities sufficient to meet the demands of a steady market. The 

 cultivation of fish for the purpose of food has been carried on for 

 many generations, and so far back as the Middle Ages considerable 

 attention was given by the monks to pond culture, in order that they 

 might have a reliable source from which to procure fish during lent. 



From those days virtually dates the systematic culture of fish in 

 waters that are thoroughly under control. 



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