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JettsPapa

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Posts posted by JettsPapa

  1. On 10/25/2023 at 11:35 PM, Cisco said:

    My water changes were about 6 gallons each. I plan on getting the water tested tomorrow. Getting ready to place an order to the Co-op, will be getting Test Strips amoung other things.

    Changing six gallons in a 65 gallon tank won't have much effect.  If you want to get nitrates down I'd recommend considerably more.  The math is pretty easy.  If you want to reduce nitrates by half you need to change half of the water.  A 25% water change will reduce the nitrates by 25%.

  2. On 10/25/2023 at 2:15 PM, campingdude84 said:

    I am adding some neocaridinia shrimp to my tank tomorrow.

    What should I feed them?

    is Baxter AE good?

    any other products good? 

    thank you.

    First, I wouldn't feed Bacter AE.  While I've seen some shrimp keepers say it works well for them, I've also seen an alarming of reports of it killing every shrimp in the tank.  I have never used it, and my shrimp grow and multiply just fine.  Even people who do use it say to feed much less than the directions recommend.

    Since they're in a tank with fish you don't really need to target feed them, but of course you can if you want to.

  3. On 10/25/2023 at 3:41 PM, nickc_1982 said:

    Would val get a bit much in a 20 long? I’m currently planning some background plants. I think Cory recommended the dwarf sagittaria in one of his videos as it doesn’t grow as much

    I wouldn't plant it in a 29 gallon tank.  Cryptocoryne spiralis is another good option if you want something that looks similar to jungle val, but doesn't get nearly as tall.  The only drawback is that it doesn't spread like jungle val (or at least it doesn't for me, and other crypts do).

  4. On 10/24/2023 at 10:41 AM, campingdude84 said:

    I have been feeding flake food to the tank for nearly 4 years now. The fish go nuts for it, but it always seems to dirty the tank..

    That shouldn't be happening.  I suspect you have very low quality flakes, or you're feeding too much.

    • Like 1
  5. First, you mentioned a colony of endler's.  Since you said the tank is for an inexperienced fish keeper I wouldn't recommend that.  They likely won't want to deal with the fry.  However, a group of all males would be a good option.

    Eight to ten of any of the nano shoaling fish (chili rasboras, ember tetras, celestial pearl danios, etc) should also work.

    • Like 1
  6. On 10/21/2023 at 2:06 AM, Cisco said:

    Hi thanks for your reply. The water test chart I have from PetSmart reads 160 unsafe level as of a weekago. 0 - 20 is considered safe. I have done two water changes this week and have tried over dosing with SeaChem Prime.  Last Saturday I used a cap full to help detox the nitrates. The instructions suggessed a cap full for 150g tank I have 165 so that seemed a safe first step. After the 2 water changes I had the water tested again Wed, there was some improvement probably around 100 -120. My tank tend to average 60 for the nitrates.

    Alkalinity is low near zero the store attendent said that should rise as I bring the Nitrates down. Also, ammonia and nitrite is zero or near there. PH is 6.8 or .9 in that area. 

    160 ppm is pretty high, though I think that 20 ppm safe level is overly cautious.  You said you did two water changes.  How large were they, and how much did they reduce the nitrate levels?

    • Thanks 1
  7. Guppies do okay for me when the air temperature gets down into the mid 50's, in 20 gallon unheated tubs, but I don't know what the water temperature goes to.  I don't know if that helps or not.

    I don't think anyone can give you a definitive answer on whether or not you should add another heater without knowing how low the air temperature will get, or for how long.  Is there any chance you could move them to a larger container?  The water will change temperature more slowly with larger volume.

  8. On 10/17/2023 at 2:56 AM, Cisco said:

    . . . my nitrate are out of wack again. what  Co-op products should I order to get things back in order again. I have a decent amount of plants, but I would like to get some that target nitrates more. Currently I have several anubias plants which are slow growing, about a month ago I added 2 African Sword plants and they are starting to get some nice new growth, and some Java ferns, Wisteria and I am developing a moss wall with Java moss and an other variety of moss.

    I'm not aware of any products to reduce nitrates, other than live plants.  Water changes will help, of course, assuming your source water doesn't have high nitrates.

    You said your nitrates are "out of whack," but didn't give a number.  What is the level?

    • Thanks 1
  9. On 10/16/2023 at 12:58 PM, FishRBeautiful said:

    I thought of one pearl gourami but I wasn’t sure if it would be too big for a 20 gallon tank. Or if it was too big to live with honeys.

    I'd stick with the honeys.  Pearls are one of my favorite fish, but like honeys they seem to do best in groups, and I wouldn't mix gouramis anyway.

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  10. On 10/16/2023 at 9:50 AM, FishRBeautiful said:

    That’s another good idea. They won’t fight? I have probably a male/female pair. If I can find them. Hard to get here. 

    I of course can't give you an ironclad guarantee, but it's doubtful.  Honey gouramis (and pearl gouramis) are generally much more peaceful than other gourami species.

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  11. On 10/15/2023 at 10:55 AM, Natalie is new said:

    Thanks for the recommendation. I just tested my tap water last night and it looks like my ph is ridiculously high. I'm going to purchase some planting media and plants and start tinkering to see how it goes. I'm traveling this week so I'm going to wait until I return. 

    Please define "ridiculously high."  My water is 8.2 pH, and I have a wide variety of fish, invertebrates, and plants doing just fine.  Unless yours is much higher than that I would strongly suggest you not "tinker" with it.

  12. Welcome to the forum.  Unless your source water has nitrates (and it wouldn't hurt to test it), then yes, I'd recommend you keep doing water changes until it gets down below 40 ppm.  You probably already know this, but I wouldn't do them too often, or too large.  You don't want to shock the fish still in the tank that have adapted to the high nitrates (and whatever else may be going on with a tank that was neglected for a while).

    1. They don't need to be planted in substrate immediately.
    2. I don't think there's a hard and fast number, but it's quite a while in most cases.  Probably at least several weeks.
    3. You'd probably want to get rhizome plants out of the pots sooner than plants that are typically planted in the substrate, but a few days certainly wouldn't hurt anything.  I'm pretty sure they don't drop dead in the warehouse if they aren't shipped immediately after arrival.
    4. I don't know of any reason not to fertilize right away.

    And welcome to the forum.

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