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SanFranPsychoAquatics

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Posts posted by SanFranPsychoAquatics

  1. On 1/27/2022 at 11:30 AM, ScottieB said:

    The pelvicachromis is a great idea. One of my absolute favorites! The behavior of a pair is really interesting to watch. 

    The wetspot in Portland a few varieties, along with a ton of other stuff: 

    https://www.wetspottropicalfish.com/product/pelvicachromis-drachenfelsi/

    I've shipped a lot of stuff from them and never had a bad experience. You could also check aquabid

    Oh man those look cool.  Sadly I have this tank at a really high pH for the Celebes rainbows though, and the wet spot is advising those Pelvicachromis come from soft water.

  2. On 1/27/2022 at 10:04 AM, MAC said:

    If you're looking at dwarf cichlids you could consider Pelvicachromis species (kribensis). I have P. Taeniatus and they are amazing. They may dig around a little in the substrate but I've kept them in community 29 gallons with no problems even when they were breeding. There are quite a few really interesting rarer species if you could track some down. 

    They would do just fine in your water. 

    Thanks for your suggestions, much appreciated. 

  3. On 1/27/2022 at 8:42 AM, ScottieB said:

    What a great problem to have! The apistos can live happily in those conditions, breeding and hatching eggs might be a different story. Though I think it depends on the specific type.

    First thing is head to Ocean Aquarium (assuming your in San Fran) thats an epic fish store! See if anything catches your eye, its hard to ask someone cause we are gonna be tempted to tell you what we like. But your tastes and interests are prob different. 

    My tastes might be some shell dwellers, a pair of angelfish, apistos or some other dwarf cichlid. You have a good size tank that accommodate a lot of options. 

     

    Do you know any other dwarf cichlids that will leave plants alone?

    On 1/27/2022 at 8:42 AM, ScottieB said:

    What a great problem to have! The apistos can live happily in those conditions, breeding and hatching eggs might be a different story. Though I think it depends on the specific type.

    First thing is head to Ocean Aquarium (assuming your in San Fran) thats an epic fish store! See if anything catches your eye, its hard to ask someone cause we are gonna be tempted to tell you what we like. But your tastes and interests are prob different. 

    My tastes might be some shell dwellers, a pair of angelfish, apistos or some other dwarf cichlid. You have a good size tank that accommodate a lot of options. 

     

    I do like Ocean aquarium. And the owners are awesome, I have a great school of Cardinal tetras from them but the entire store is almost entirely livebearers 😕 

    • Like 1
  4. Hello everyone, looking for suggestions on a colorful centerpiece fish for a 45 gallon (3 feet long, 2 feet tall).  I’ve got a group of amazing Celebes rainbows, and some skirt tetras… these fish are great fun but they are all gray.  I’d like to add some colorful Apistos as a centerpiece, but the tank is 9dkH, 8.2ph, 11dgH.  Can the apistos live happily in these water parameters? And does anyone have any suggestions for other centerpiece? Thanks!!

  5. I tested my last 2 baby brine hatches, they tested at 3ppm and 1ppm ammonia respectively.  I tested it following one of my cardinal tetras contracting dropsy within 3-4 weeks of starting to feed live BBS.  These cardinals were very healthy for 5+ months, and losing one to dropsy within a month of starting to feed live BBS seems too much of a coincidence.  

    I never tested any ammonia in the tank, but I never tested after feeding.  I'm also concerned that I could be creating bacteria in the warm hatchery, then putting that water in the tank each morning.  I know I can filter the BBS but I have lots of tanks and ponds, and it will become too time consuming.  I'm just wondering why there are high levels of ammonia in the hatch, and if ammonia and/or bacteria may be causing issues for my fish.

    Thanks for any tips or advice 🙂

  6. On 10/13/2021 at 9:02 AM, Fish Folk said:

    That’s not good! I bet the seal on your fridge is bad.

    If you keep Artemia cysts in the plastic zip-lock bag, it’s probably not a major issue. But if you empty them out into the can, I’d be very concerned.

    I keep them in the bag too.  This fridge is really cheap, only $30 bucks new.  I’m gonna buy another one and see if it has the same issue.

    • Like 1
  7. Hello everyone.  I’m curious if there is a concern in storing baby brine eggs in a very moist fridge.  I’ve got a cheap $30 mini fridge that always has some small pools of water in it.  I pulled out my baby brine eggs after almost 2 weeks in this fridge, and the containers wet and rusty.  Is this a concern? Or will the eggs keep dry in the packaging?

    Thanks!

    2411CC60-636C-418C-868A-0EFC98AE68CA.jpeg

  8. Looks like a good start!  I would try to plant it heavily from the start here, as healthy plants in every corner of the tank give algae nowhere to call home.

    For cleanup crew (ordered most to least important): 1 amano shrimp per 5 liters, 1 oto per 20 liters, 1 nerite snail per 5 liters (if you can tolerate little white eggs being laid), and just 1 SAE if you're feeling frisky.

    What light are you using? 

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