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JettsPapa

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Posts posted by JettsPapa

  1. On 11/17/2022 at 12:04 PM, Levi_Aquatics said:

    I would go with a group of corydoras of your choice, a bristlenose, and a school of guppies or other livebearers.  For a show fish I think a dwarf gourami would be a nice addition.

    I would not recommend a dwarf gourami.  It's difficult to find one that's healthy and won't kill everything else in the tank.

    On 11/17/2022 at 12:44 PM, cavdad45 said:

    instead of pearl ghouramis, look at  honey ghouramis for a lighter bioload, as well as playing well with others

    I don't disagree with honey gouramis for the centerpiece, but pearl gouramis are rarely aggressive toward other species if they're kept in groups instead of single.

    Here's my recommendation:

    • For the centerpiece, 3 pearl gouramis or 5 honey gouramis, with females outnumbering males.
    • Ten or so of your favorite mid-size rasbora, tetra, etc.  I'm a big fan of serpae tetras, especially in planted tanks, but there are many good options.  I also like black neon tetras, lemon tetras, and pristella tetras, and they have been pretty much trouble free for me.
    • 6-8 of one of the smaller Corydoras species

    or.

    • a pair of Bolivian rams for the centerpiece, skip the corys (since the rams spend most of their time near the bottom), and up the mid-size shoaling fish to 15 or so.
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  2. Most of my sponge filters have a lid from a to-go cup with a hole in the center for the straw floating at the top with the air line passing through the hole.  It still allows for some water movement at the top, but cuts back on the splashing, and it floats up and down to stay on the surface.  It works well, and I like the price.  If it gets cruddy it's easy enough to replace.

    By the way, I'm not smart enough to figure that out myself.  I saw it on an LRB Aquatics youtube video.

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  3. On 11/16/2022 at 10:39 AM, zelibeli said:

    I will try water from home this week but I tend to change about 3 gallons total, and I honestly can't see myself hauling that in every week. Maybe if I did 1 a day for 3 days 😛

    My work tank is just a 5.5 gallon, and I change one gallon every week or ten days, so hauling that much water isn't a problem.

  4. On 11/14/2022 at 10:19 AM, Patrick_G said:

    I think it fascinating how Mexican tacos that were just grilled meat, onion and cilantro on a tortilla morphed into ground beef, iceberg lettuce, tomato and cheddar cheese stuffed into a fried tortilla. 
     

    A few years ago I was at the place I posted about above and the guy in line ahead of me was telling the lady what he wanted on his taco.  He pointed to the bin with the cilantro in it and said "Put some of that parsley on it please."  I didn't bother to correct him, and the lady behind the counter probably didn't hear him, so she loaded him up with cilantro.  I've often wondered what he thought about his parsley.

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  5. The best come from my local convenience store that has a food counter.  When I stop in around 6:15 to get breakfast every morning they have at least two people making food and two more serving it, and I'm pretty sure they all grew up speaking Spanish.  Great food (including tortillas they make right there from scratch) and nice people, which is why I stop every morning.

    Technically they're burritos, and not tacos, but I don't care.

    • Like 1
  6. On 11/13/2022 at 7:15 AM, Aiden Carter said:

    Problem with making your own or using furniture is you don’t have the peace of mind that you get with a dedicated aquarium stand

    I disagree.  Someone who is knowledgeable about carpentry, or evaluating existing furniture, can have just as much peace of mind using a homemade stand or repurposed furniture as someone one who buys a dedicated stand.

    I've also seen dedicated stands I wouldn't trust.

  7. Are you determined to make your own?  There are many tanks out there, including most of mine, that are on various pieces of steel or solid wood furniture.  It may be a challenge to find one the right size, but it's worth looking.  Thrift stores or online sites for used items are good places to start.

    There are several reasons for using furniture instead.  It often has doors or drawers for storage, and don't require any woodworking skills.

    • Like 1
  8. On 11/10/2022 at 11:49 AM, The Arthritic Aquarist said:

    Of the ones you mention, I've only had Nerites (the Zebra and Red Racer varieties) which I've kept for the past 12 years or so.  I've personally never seen them burrowing. 

    I probably can't find it now, but I have a picture of a nerite snail cleaning the glass, going along about half buried in the substrate, with an army of neocaridina shrimp following behind foraging in the substrate it had stirred up.

    On 11/10/2022 at 11:37 AM, PerceptivePesce said:

    My tank is currently stocked with epiphytes glued to rocks, and guppies.  I'm interested in burrowing snails to clean my substrate, but I've read that trumpets are invasive and rabbits eat plants.  There are other varieties of burrowing snails like cappuccinos, and chopsticks, but I can't seem to find much info about their behavior.  I also read that nerites burrow, but that it may be a stress behavior.

    Would yall mind telling me about your good and bad experiences with different burrowing snails? 

    I don't know that I'd consider them invasive.  If you over feed their numbers will increase accordingly, like many snails.  Otherwise they aren't really a problem (at least in my experience).  After receiving the initial batch I have intentionally added them to all my other tanks.  I like that they keep the sand aerated.

    • Like 1
  9. I posted some guidelines in another thread (see below).  You might get some useful information from it.  One thing mentioned there that I can't stress enough is to let the tank "season" for several months before adding the shrimp.

    As far as colors, I'd say just get whatever color you think you'd like best, though if the tank you're planning to put them in is already set up you might want to let your substrate help decide.  Red and yellow shrimp show up best on dark substrate, but blue ones just about disappear on dark substrate and look much better on lighter ones.

     

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