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Dancing Matt

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Posts posted by Dancing Matt

  1. The temperature should be fine for him. If you wanted some rooting plants and got some hardy ones (or easy like crypts) you could likely use the substrate you just may need some root tabs for optimal growth. If you like your substrate don't feel you have to change it. @KaitieG is right. Plants that pull nutrients from the water column would be great if you are concerned about the substrate. There are different types of anubis and Java fern that are great at that. I have anubis nana petite (picture) with my betta but bigger varieties would be great to help create plant density. You could also put in floating plants but they can shade out lower plants and you would have to keep space on the water surface for the betta to breathe.

    16085705138276317843836658153827.jpg

  2. 5 minutes ago, Bottlecap said:

    I got 100% silicone. I did not check if it was aquarium silicone, but I assumed it would be fine since it is 100% and said it was waterproof within 30 minutes of applying.

    Gotcha, I have just heard mixed results of people using silicones that promoted "mold free" not had any experience my self with that kind.

    • Like 1
  3.  I'd be curious to hear a suggestion for this. I am having a similar situation with a goldfish tank. I have been doing weekly water changes. Today I got some nitrifying bacteria that I will be dumping in my tank to see if it will help to seed my bio-filter. My plan is to add it every day for a few days or until I run out.

    I did this once before with the same fish when I first started (I learned to not by on impulse the hard way) and I think it worked... when I tested after treating the water for a few days I noticed that the ammonia was lower. I then tested the nitrites and nitrates and noticed that the nitrites were high so I knew the process was working. The only thing I don't know is if the change from ammonia to nitrites was from the bacteria or was already in process and I just hadn't been testing it.

    I am currently feeding protein every other day to lower waste.

  4. I have airline hose that I cut, melted and attached in a circle (had to do a couple tries to get it to work for me this way). I use it with my beta, his tank has duckweed and Frog bit. If I am not careful with the density it can grow over into the rings otherwise I'm fine. It sounds like your issue is the thickness or density of the hornwort? Can you make an aria that doesn't have multiple layers of hornwort? What about if you float some PVC (vertically) or a plastic container (and cut out the bottom of the container)? Then you would have floating walls that could keep the plants from getting in. Maybe zip tie some eggcrate diffuser together and float that?

  5. I believe waiting about 2 weeks. If you are using paraclense here is the link for Aquarium CO-OP product page they have their own recommendation in the "directions/specifications" tab.

    Aquarium Co-Op Instructions: Dose one packet per 10 gallons of water to be treated. Let sit in aquarium for 7 days. Then do 25% water change.

    Rest the fish 2 weeks.

    Week 4, retreat with a dose of one packet per 10 gallons of water to be treated. Let sit for 7 days. Then do a 25% water change.

    fritz-paracleanse_240x.jpg?v=1590738860
    WWW.AQUARIUMCOOP.COM

    Treats Internal Parasites Plant Safe Invertebrate safe We recommend using Paracleanse to treat internal tapeworms, a problem that nearly all freshwater fish have when purchasing from a pet store. We use this on every fish we...

     

     

  6. One definitely looks stressed, i am pretty sure those horizontal bars are stress bars. I am wondering with hobbit, what kind of food and how much? how long ago did you get them?

  7. Great drawings! I like all the algae covered rocks. Have you noticed if your loaches like Baby brine shrimp? I started feeding my White Clouds and my loach would come out and seemed to be eating what it could.

    Something to think about for the light, when i put an LED light on my 10 gal (bout the same height of my 20L) I ended up having to dim it all the way and put a shorter photo period to avoid excessive algae. 

    Do you happen to have a guess for what species mine is (kinda bad pictures/camera) both pictures are the same loach. My LFS just sold them as a "hillstream loach".

    thumbnail?appId=YMailNorrin&downloadWhenThumbnailFails=true&pid=2

    thumbnail?appId=YMailNorrin&downloadWhenThumbnailFails=true&pid=3

    • Like 1
  8. One thought is if she healthy and responsive it is probably okay. If she is active and eating, no visible sign of disease... If I startle my male (bump the glass loudly or disturb too much when cleaning the gravel) he will hide behind the drift wood in his tank but otherwise he is swimming up to the glass when ever I get near his tank.

  9. I'm sure others will input but one thing that stands out is the 12hr plus night cycle. I am assuming that the night cycle means blue light is on? Is that correct? If not 12 hours may be too much, you could try dropping it down to 8 hours, making sure to have them on at the time you are most around the tank. If you do have blue lights on at night that could definitely cause algae bloom.

  10. I haven't seen the live stream but I can say that I have been freezing my baby brine shrimp then later feeding them to my white clouds and betta and am having no problem. I dispense the shrimp into a container and throw it into the freezer. Later when I need it I run it under cold water in a net to de-thaw the shrimp. I haven't yet just chucked the ice puck in the tank but I am tempted to.

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