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CalmedByFish

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Posts posted by CalmedByFish

  1. I second @Drew Schmidt's idea of SerpaDesigns videos. I found them a couple days ago. Also found a few other great YT channels on the topic of ponds and aquariums. It may turn out that you barely feel like moving (I hope not), but videos work great to let your imagination roam - a pleasant distraction from feeling lame. 

    I hope your case turns out to be a mild one. Regardless, thank you so much for staying in quarantine the full 10 days. I have a family member who can't be vaxxed. ❤️ 

    • Like 1
  2. On 7/19/2021 at 10:08 AM, Taco Playz said:

    We wanted to do some Ricefish.

    Just a heads-up. I researched "Daisy's blue rice fish" and Medaka (before settling on endlers). It turns out they're not the same species. If you do decide on "rice fish" or "medaka," make sure you know exactly what you're getting. That way, you'll accurately know what their needs are. 

    • Like 1
  3. On 7/19/2021 at 11:51 AM, Griznatch said:

    I wouldn't think a reptile heater would work, too great a risk of electrical shock/short.. You'd need something made for heating water that can withstand freezing temps, if that's what you have in your area.

    Also consider whether the electricity might go out in your area during winter - like the Texas Freeze. I wonder if solar-powered heaters exist. 

  4. On 7/19/2021 at 11:28 AM, Taco Playz said:

    The one @Jbeezydadfound was 125 gallons I think. So if I were to do ricefish or goldfish how much could I put in there.

    I've heard ricefish reproduce well, so even if you started with about 6, you'd likely have more soon. 

    Keep in mind that whatever species you choose will need to be a species you'll have space for their whole life. I don't know whether 125 gallons is big enough for a gold fish - I at least know it's not big enough for more than about 3... unless you're committed to doing water changes every 5 minutes. 😂 

    Depending on where you live, also consider how high of a temp the species can handle. 

     

  5. On 7/19/2021 at 5:07 AM, Littlefish said:

     I lost hundreds last fall the 1st cold front, which was much colder than expected.   I think the air temp dipped to the upper 30's.  I dont know how low the water temp was.  A handful of juvenile females survived and I now have more than I can count again. 

    Interestingly, the full-sized females and males died, the only survivors were juveniles. 

    I'm sorry for your loss. That's awful. 

    If the upper 30's isn't safe, that must mean the upper 40's isn't either. It's a helpful data point. 

    Very interesting about the juveniles. I'll make sure to take a lot of juveniles when I (eventually) move. 

  6. On 7/18/2021 at 11:57 PM, lefty o said:

     ive heard the temps affect m/f ratio of fry, but have never seen it myself, nor any scientific testing to back it up. 

    I found one regarding regular guppies, so that's close. The abstract includes this tidbit: "The proportion of females increased gradually with decreasing temperature and the proportion of males increased gradually with increasing temperatures..." So, maybe!

    https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1365-2109.2005.01412.x?systemMessage=Wiley+Online+Library+will+be+disrupted+on+4+August+from+10%3A00-12%3A00+BST+(05%3A00-07%3A00+EDT)+for+essential+maintenance

  7. As far as you know, what's the lowest and highest temp that endlers can sustain before the temp diminishes their health?

    Surely someone on this forum has tried them in a pond, unheated tank, sauna... 😜 What have you figured out?

    (By the way, in case someone's interested: I found a reliable-looking source that says they drop a 50/50 m/f ratio of fry at 77 F. Cooler gets a higher ratio of female fry, and warmer gets a higher ratio of male fry.)

     

  8. On 7/15/2021 at 9:44 AM, gardenman said:

    If your tap water has ammonia, or nitrites out of the tap, by storing it with some crushed coral in a container the good bacteria can set up housekeeping in the container and make the water safer for your fish. It's kind of a win-win. My well water has an absurdly high ammonia content from the tap, but a few days in the bottle and the ammonia is gone. 

    Genius idea. It might be helpful to also stick some pothos at the surface. It can help pull out ammonia and nitrite, and even the resulting nitrates.

    • Like 1
  9. On 7/14/2021 at 11:40 PM, Daedalus said:

    Hikari first bites please save my babies!

    I'm not familiar with first bites, but I've discovered that any pellet-style food can be ground as fine as flour using a pill crusher. (Or put it in a ziploc and tap it with a hammer or other object.) Just mentioning that in case it helps.

  10. Well that's... one way to decorate. 

    I am both concerned for your animals, and intrigued by the idea of tank glitter. I know it's stressful right now, but once the fixing is done, it'll be a story that lasts for decades. 

    • Like 1
  11. When a water conditioner says it "detoxifies ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate," does that mean

    A) Bacteria can no longer use the ammonia and nitrite to maintain the cycle?

    B) The plants can't use the nitrate?

    C) Those substances won't show up on my test kits?

    D) The ammonia will only be "detoxified" briefly? 

    (My cheap water conditioner is running low, so I'm seeing if there's a better option to buy.)

  12. I want to be able to use a nano air pump if I don't have access to electricity. ACO's page for the pump says "great in a power outage situation with a battery pack back up," and links to this:

     https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B077HFFLMS/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=tank01-20&camp=1789&creative=9325&linkCode=as2&creativeASIN=B077HFFLMS&linkId=e6ef7700bbfd0200a8e362175d5c3f9d

    On Amazon's product page, I see no indication that this can be used as a battery. Rather, it looks like it charges devices that have batteries in them - which the nano pump does not. 

    There are 2 pictures of the Amazon product with a pump-style plug in it. In both pictures, the product is plugged in to an electricity source...

    So can this be used as a battery - NOT just as a battery charger? 

  13. I think all the practical help I could offer already has been. The test kits are super key. 

    I guess it was less than a year ago that I learned Nitrates exist... which led to learning about ammonia, then not chasing pH... you get the picture. I think most of us have been in some situation where we're having to rapidly figure out what in the world is going on with a tank. You'll make it through, and you've got empathy here. 

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