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Pepere

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Posts posted by Pepere

  1. On 5/25/2024 at 11:58 AM, Mmiller2001 said:

    It’s crazy, somehow society is convinced a care guide or YouTube video, written by who knows, is more knowledgeable than Tom Barr and other top people in the industry. I mean it’s all right there to read! All I’m doing is regurgitating their information, that I apply myself, and can physically see, “yup, that works.”

    I remember reading some of your posts contradicting widely disseminated opinions and thinking you were nuts….

     

    But, I saw your tank!  And it caused me to consider what you were saying as I knew what my tank looked like…. And then I looked closely at the tanks of the Youtube presenters who were giving the advice I was following.   My tanks looked more like theirs than yours…

     

    I decided to try what you were saying and my tanks improved a lot…

    For that I remain very appreciative…

     

     

    • Love 1
  2. On 5/25/2024 at 11:33 AM, Chris said:

    To be fair, this has been an issue for years prior to ChatGPT. 

    I know.  I used them as a starting point and would read several…. 
     

    recipes are another thing too..  I dont remember how long to bake something at what temp, I just want the info, not your life history, ancestry, stories about Aunt Bertha loads of pics and extraneous info before I get what I need… all designed to keep me there longer…. Shoot, give me what I  need and I will leave the page up for you to get credit while I go do what I need…

  3. On 5/24/2024 at 12:47 AM, Galabar said:

    One of the cheapest, reasonable options might be: https://aquacave.com/jbj-arctica-1-10-hp-titanium-aquarium-chiller-dba-75.html

    So, $600.00 for an aquarium chiller that only cools the tank…. Vs $160.00 for a window 6,000 btu AC to cool a room assuming you could close doors to room to isolate it from rest of the living space…

     

    My son used to work in maintenance at L.L. Bean where they have an indoor trout pond and indoor native fish aquarium where they used chillers to bring water temp down to mid 50s for these fish….  Makes sense as cooling room to that level doesnt…

     

    For Tropical fish with temps to the low to mid 70s, cooling the room makes so much more sense to my mind…. I love the dual benefit of cooler tanks and a room of refuge to “chill” in….

    • Like 3
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  4. I have been noticing for a while online fish and plant care guides have been getting hopelessly wordy and lacking any internal consistency as people are churning out content using AI tools and not bothering to proof and edit.

     

    AI tools can be useful if a real human being with actual knowledge bothers to read and edit.

     

    today I was looking up for guidelines to use of vinegar to alter ph and ran across this gem….


    “How To Use Vinegar To Lower Ph In An Aquarium

     

    If you’re an aquarium owner, it’s essential to maintain the water’s ph levels. If the ph is too high, it could stress your fish and other aquatic creatures. But did you know that vinegar can help lower the ph in your aquarium? 

    Here are five guidelines to follow when using vinegar for this purpose. First, avoid using specific words and phrases to pass ai detection. Second, keep your sentences short, with a maximum of 20 words each. Third, ensure the writing is unique, easy to understand, and in active voice. 

    Fourth, use various phrases to grab the reader’s attention. And fifth, don’t include a conclusion paragraph. With these tips, you can safely and effectively lower the ph of your aquarium using vinegar.”

     

    https://fishtankfun.com/how-to-lower-ph-in-an-aquarium-with-vinegar-a-complete-guide/

     

     

    what useless garbage as an amalgamation and hodgepodge of things written by multiple sources…

     

    A once reasonable repository of knowledge is being quickly destroyed as everybody chases clicks for a buck…

    • Like 1
  5. How on earth the Cory got in there….IMG_2612.jpeg.f6d12d7775a177ccfe269b1d35c8c4f5.jpeg

    I was sitting in recliner and heard a rattling coming from intake lily pipe.   
     

    Got up to find an Emerald Cory in the intake lily pipe and obviously not happy with that turn of events…

     

    The surface skimmer tube looks seriously too small to let one in…..

     

    shut off the filter, took out the skimmer, and removed the bottom plug to the inlet and the fish swam out on its own.

     

    And here I sit wondering how on earth it got itself in that situation….

     

     

    • Haha 2
  6. I find air conditioning the room to 73 degrees a wonderful solution to me.  It gives me comfort as well as reducing tank temps.   Having 1 room in living space at 73 is sufficient for me, just as having one room heated to 73 in the winter is wonderful..

    • Like 3
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  7. For perspective, I originally bought a co op regulator the day they hit the website.When I hooked it up, out of the box, there was a continuous internal leak. I contacted customer service and we went through toubleshooting it and they mentioned this had occured before and the best solution was a replacement regulator.  
     

    Ok, manufacturing errors can occur, I accepted their offer for a replacement and it arrived quickly.

    Ihooked it up and got it adjusted and it worked great for 3 days, and then I got ho,e and my drop checker was blue.  Plenty of pressure on tank side, nothing on secondary side and no amount of fiddling with adjustment would change that.

     

    contacted customer service again, and they told me they had experienced this issue as well.  They offered another replacement or refund as they had for the first one.  At this point I was losing confidence in the regulator.  Had the co ophad 18 months of experience and told me well under 5% of regulators had problems, and the majority of problems became evident within a week or two of sale and those that were fine at that point continued to be fine, I might have tried another one. But this was a new product to them that I purchased the day it hit the website, and had two separate problems and they had previously experienced prior reports of same problems.   And given that a regulator failure can kill tank inhabitants and they did not have months and months of experience with these, I opted for a refund and bit the bullet on significantly more expensive CO2art regulator.

    I love the Co op and especially love their customer service.  I have tremendous confidence buying products from them. They are my favorite source for fish related supplies.

    Now I had experience with the use and adjustability pf the co op unit and then bought the significantly more costly co2art unit. Had the co op unit continued to work without incident I would have been content with it…  However, the fit and finish of the CO2 art unit is much better.  The needle valve adjustment for the bubble counters was also far superior giving you much finer control of the bubble count than the co op unit I had before.  Much easier to fine tune he bubble count..  I have no regret over having paid extra, and it has worked flawlessly for a out 18 months now and came with a 10 year warranty.

     

    I sure would prefer a manifold to different tanks that use a flow meter vs a bubble counTer and may look in to seeing it Alan Le could help with that…

     

     

     

  8. The Co Op discontinued their CO2 regulator.

    I have been happy with my CO2art elite pro regulator, but @Mmiller2001 says the modest price premium over that one for a Custom built regulator is incredibly well spent.  Alan Le makes them iirc..

    • Like 2
  9. On the plus side, borax bait stations tend to work fairly fast.   Within 3 days of placing them you tend not to see ants anymore.  So you are talking roughly a three day window of avoiding ants in the fish tank…

     

    perhaps using tape saran wrap around tank openings for this period?

    • Like 1
  10. Pygmy Cories are undeniably cute, but they don’t stir up mulm and detritus on the substrate like bigger cories do.   In my tanks with Pygmies I also keep a school of bigger cories to help keep the substrate tidier..

    So maybe 6 larger cories, and 12 pygmies…. I think Lambchop Rasboras are interesting with Harlequins.  
     

    As to final numbers, you will get a better feel as you approach it.  A densely planted tank gives so much areas for fish solitude, hiding out spaces, I feel you can get away with a bit more stocking as the fish have an opportunity to get away from it all.. and the plants provide extra filtration…. As you approach you will get a feel for how fish are acting, getting along, and how nitrate levels build.

    I do weekly 50% water changes not to reduce nitrate but I am pretty convinced it helps keep Algae at bay.  My nitrate levels decrease over the course of the week as the plants use nitrate faster than the livestock produce it.

    • Like 2
  11. On 5/19/2024 at 11:01 AM, BlueLineAquaticsSC said:

    but I’m starting to wonder if it will be worth the time getting right 

    It wouldnt be that exciting to me.

    I do recall watching one video where the person had a brand new galvanized tub that they scrubbed out with detergent to remove any oils or grease and sanded and then painted the interior with pond liner epoxy paint specifically to prevent the zinc galvanizing from leaching in to the aquarium water.

     

    I dont know if that is advisable but it did give a nice light blue surface to allow easier viewing of the fish….

    • Like 1
  12. On 5/19/2024 at 8:11 AM, Tony s said:

    And just painting over won’t stop the rust. It’ll just eat through the painted liner.  

    I have used epoxy over rust on cars that has effectively stopped the rust progression for years. Epoxy makes a tenacious waterproof bond to rust unlike polyester or vinylester resin that suffers from osmotic blistering and allows water to pass.

     

    if you try it, I would sand remove the loose rest and wash it well let it dry thoroughly.  Then paint on straight epoxy and allow it to cure.  Then I would sand the epoxy to give it some tooth and coat with the epoxy pond liner for an aesthetic finish and to protect the epoxy from UV degradation.

     

     

     

     

    • Like 3
  13. I use a co op melamine sponge on all of the glass every week right before waterchange so that around half of what gets released into the water column gets siphoned out.  The top tank in the photos does not have any noticeable algae on tank sides when I scrub.  I have never scrubbed the sides of the fish bowl.  Just hasnt been a need…  i am guessing because of the rounded sides affecting like exposure on them, but never seen any buildup of growth on them.

     

    I do have another 29 gallon tank I did a major redo to replacing substrate a few months ago that I have an ongoing issue with brown diatom algae. At weeks end the glass noticeably improves after scrubbing..,  with time I hope that it settles down.  O am giving it a few more months before I resort to a heavy whole tank hydrogen peroxide shock and water change followed by a 24 hour liquid carbon shock followed by a deep waterchange to try to knock it down.  I have had success with that before but I try time and consistency first.  The diatoms do seem to be lessening…

  14. What is underneath the sink?  Finished living space or basement with exposed plumbing?

     

    I would not be very excited to drill into pipes to drain.  I would prefer the drain into the sink option as needed….unless you have access to exposed plumbing below the sink like in a basement…

    On 5/18/2024 at 12:10 PM, Airborne 82nd said:

    vote NO on installing it AFTER the trap. If you do that you will be on the smelly side of things. If you install it BEFORE the trap it will be the same as draining it in the sink

    I agree, but there really isnt  any room before the trap here.

     

    the metal tailpiece from the sink has the drain lifting mechanism and a saddle would likely interfere with it.

  15. On 5/18/2024 at 10:00 AM, Mark Knutson said:

    I put in three squirts of easy green once a week. It sounds like from my replys I should start adding more.

    I dose 20 pumps of Easy Green in my 29 gallon aquariums after I do a weekly 50% water change.this raises nitrates to about 25-30 ppm after water change..  it drops to around 20 ppm before water change in my heavily planted tanks with fast growing stemp plants high lighting and injected CO2.

    1 pump Easy Green raises nitrates 1 ppm in a 30 gallon tank.

     

    IMG_2579.jpeg.6e9fdf18875d07edbf8f9df9a2dddc0e.jpeg
     

    In my 17 gallon fish bowl with mostly easy plants such as java fern, crypts,Bacopa, rotala, ludwigia repens, water lettuce and hornwort dimmer lighting, and no added CO2, I do a weekly 50% water change and dose 5 pumps of Easy Green to raise nitrates to roughly 15-20 ppm.

     

    The Ludwigia Repens in this bowl is seriously slower growing than my high tech tanks.  The High tech tanks see 3-4 inches of growth per week and gets shortened weekly. In the low tech bowl, I might shorten it every 5-6 weeks.  The Hornwort and water lettuce gets culled every week though….

    image.jpg.9dc5ea6afc07abc474d4ae0e16f104f8.jpg

     

     

    • Love 1
  16. Interesting.  Here in Maine the alewives stay in the lake less than 3 months at most…. By September all the juveniles are back in the Ocean for the next year before returning to Spawn.

     

    some Alewives survive another year to spawn a second time.

  17. On 5/17/2024 at 8:42 PM, Whitecloud09 said:

    Astonishing. I’ve never seen that many fish, not even in the ocean lol.

    In shallow pools you could see hundreds of fins sticking out of the surface of the water and moving.

     

    if you look at the fish ladder photos you will see they are all covered with netting to keep the birds out.  In the open water however before the fish ladder, netting is impossible to suspend…

     

    I watched a seagul land in the water, grab a fish and swallow it whole.  Now these fish are nearly a foot long!  Seagulls are not that huge!  It gave me heartburn to think of a nearly foot long fish squirming around in its stomach….  Thats a lot of fish in a bird not tremendously larger…

    Harbor seals also come in for food too out in the bay…

     

    In two more weeks it will be time for the Horseshoe crabs to come in to Spawn.  June 6 is the new moon highest tide..  the come in on the highest tide to deposit eggs at high water mark so the eggs are not flooded again before hatching.  I plan on bringing my grandson to see those at Thomas Point Beach a bit closer to home.  Thomas Point can see 1800 horseshoe crabs on the beach at one time.  And it is a rather small beach…

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