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JettsPapa

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Posts posted by JettsPapa

  1. On 2/6/2023 at 9:04 PM, lefty o said:

     

    I ran across an article online this morning that claimed to be the "definitive" list of the top 15 country music artists.  It had George Strait at #1, followed by Johnny Cash and George Jones.  I couldn't argue with those, but they went sideways after that.  I think Hank Williams was at #7.  He should definitely have been in the top 5, and I wouldn't have faulted them for putting him at #1.

    They had a number of them that I thought were questionable, but Waylon Jennings didn't even make the list, which I felt was inexcusable.

  2. My hardness isn't off the charts, but it's pretty high, and my water is 8.2 pH.  I'd give the plants more time, especially the vallisneria.  I have corkscrew val and it gets around 3' tall in my 65 gallon tank (it reaches the top and then lays over a foot or so).

    Some of these were mentioned above, but hornwort, Brazilina pennywort, moneyworth, guppy grass, water wisteria, water sprite, pearl weed, and crypts are some plants that have done well for me, crypts especially.  Duck weed did well too, until I found and killed all of it (I hope; it's only been a few months since I last saw some).

    • Like 1
  3. I thought it was probably a dwarf gourami, but was hoping it wasn't.  They're beautiful fish, and very popular, but because of that popularity commercial breeders haven't been as selective as they should be when choosing breeding stock.

    Unfortunately they are often plagued with health and behavior issues.  When they approach maturity they often become very aggressive to any tank mates (if they live long enough).

    If you keep it in a tank with other fish I'd suggest keeping a close eye on it and have a backup plan in place if that happens.

  4. On 2/4/2023 at 7:24 AM, Sharon M said:

    I just keep thinking it would make a soupy mess.

    That's what the 2" layer of sand is for.  If you're careful to not disturb it when adding water it won't be any more soupy than if it didn't have the soil layer.

    I usually spread a towel out on the sand and pour the water onto it carefully.

    • Thanks 1
  5. On 2/3/2023 at 10:09 AM, Tommy Vercetti said:

    I use fusion 360 and Tinker cad. That model was made with Tinker cad.

    I'm on a CAD forum that has a Fusion 360 section (https://www.cadforum.net/viewforum.php?f=8).  That section isn't very active since it's a relatively new forum mostly made up of refugees from the former Solidworks sponsored forum (they switched it to their own home grown "platform"; long story and a sore subject), but you might want to take a look some time.

    • Like 1
  6. On 2/3/2023 at 8:46 AM, Theplatymaster said:

    This has probably been tested before, im trying myself.

    The preface to this project was mostly watching MDfishtanks videos, how most of his tanks use a capped nutrient layer, and i thought id test it. But using dirt wasnt really a good option(Suprising i know right). However i remembered that i have a big bag of potting soil in the garage, and its similar to dirt so hence my experiments.

    I've been watching quite a few Father Fish videos lately, and he's made a believer of me.  I have a tank I set up in November 2021 with a 1" layer of mixed dirt and dry cow manure (I have cows, so it wasn't hard to get), then a 1" layer of a good quality potting soil, and capped with a 2" thick layer of pool filter sand.  I initially planted it with pearl weed, because a LFS said he'd buy it from me, but when I went to sell him some he had decided to grow his own and only gave me store credit for it.

    I ripped it out and planted crypts.  They're doing very well.

    Edit:  Since setting up that 20 gallon tank I've broken down three of my four 10-gallon tanks and re-did them (and the fourth one's turn is coming soon) with deep substrate.  I couldn't bring myself to put 4" of substrate in a tank that small so I skipped the potting soil layer on those.  Of course they're newer tanks, but the plants are doing well in them also.

    • Like 3
  7. On 2/3/2023 at 6:33 AM, FLFishChik said:

    I was hoping that maybe once this shoot was tall enough, I could trim it, replant the top and the original would branch a bit to help fill in that space.

    Anacharis does best for me if I just drop a piece in the tank and let it do what it wants.  Sometimes it floats and sometimes it sinks.  It will send roots out along the stem, but it won't root from the cut end like stem plants will.

    • Like 1
  8. As mentioned above, endlers typically don't predate on fry.   With guppies it depends on the variety.  Some, like my dumbo mosaics, don't seem to bother them at all.

    Others, like the albino koi's I had for a while, are relentless fry hunters.  I had three females with one male for a good while, and they'd look pregnant, and then not so much, so they were obviously having fry, but I only ever saw one, and I only saw it once.  The man who owns the LFS where I got them warned me that would happen, but I had to try anyway.

    I've always heard that "With some people you can tell them, but others you have to show."  I guess we know which group I belong to.

    • Like 1
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  9. I have either pool filter sand or Black Diamond sandblasting sand in all ten tanks (including the ones with soil as the bottom layer), so that would be my recommendation.  Waste stays on top where it's easy to vacuum up (though I leave mine to break down to feed the plants).  Others prefer gravel.  I don't know of any reason to mix the two unless you want the benefits of sand but want the rocks for aesthetic reasons.

    • Like 2
  10. Crypts are one of my favorite plants (I have around a half dozen varieties), and easy to grow, but they are finicky about being transplanted.  Mine will go through transplant shock just being moved between my tanks, with the same water, light, temp, etc.

    If it was me I'd trim the yellow leaves off and plant it where you want now.  That way it only has to adapt to new conditions once.

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  11. Has the Seachem filter been in the tank the whole 10 months?  If yes, you should be able to go ahead and take the sponge filter out.  If not, I'd wait until it's been in there for at least a month, and longer would of course be better.

    Of course monitor the water parameters for a while after removing it, but you probably already knew that.

    • Like 1
  12. On 1/31/2023 at 9:48 AM, Ohad said:

    Only my experiences. But the first months with my first tank I got rotting melting plants and ammonia spikes that led to algae .

    If your tank can deal with ammonia ( maybe again its in my mind) less algae, you worry less about over-fertilization and so on  

    It's typical for plants to melt back when introduced to a new environment, and as far as I know that's just as true for older tanks as new ones.

    Plants use ammonia as fertilizer, so I don't believe that's a problem for them.

    • Like 1
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