https://3speak.tv/watch?v=nishanahamed/qnuhkcpb
Hello everyone,
I’m Nishan Ahmed, and today I want to share a hands-on experience with a fish feed machine that we recently used.
This video gives you a close-up view of how fish feed is made using a small, efficient machine — something that, to me, represents more than just automation. It’s a symbol of how times are changing.
For those of us who grew up in the village, we know how expensive and labor-intensive it used to be to buy or make a sack of fish feed.
And now? A machine is doing it all on its own.
What you'll see in this video:
I tried to capture each step as clearly as possible —
so that you can see how affordable and simple it has become to make your own feed at home or on a small farm.
We added raw materials one by one —
mustard cake, broken rice, rice bran, salt —
and within a short time, small uniform feed pellets started coming out.
These pellets become even more nutritious after drying under the sun.
It had been raining heavily for days, but when the sun finally came out, we didn’t wait — we decided to use the machine and make feed right then and there.
There was a time when making this kind of feed required long hours, manual labor, and significant cost.
But now? It only takes a few minutes — and you’re in full control.
This video shows how a small investment can let you create your own fish feed production setup.
Step-by-step shown in the video:
How the raw materials are mixed
How they are fed into the machine
How the feed is formed and comes out
What the final pellets look like
A thought about the future...
Imagine a day when robotic fish farmers operate machines using smartphones,
where each ingredient in the feed is analyzed in real-time,
and the feed is automatically customized based on the fish’s health and condition.
This kind of technology goes beyond just making feed —
it touches fields like aquatic biology, agro-robotics, and food security.
A personal reflection...
I wrote this because maybe someone else is thinking the same thing I am:
“If machines do everything, where does that leave humans?”
Maybe questions like these are what keep us human.
Maybe these shifts help us better understand —
what we’re losing, and what we’re learning to build in new ways.