Jump to content

ACW

Members
  • Posts

    23
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Feedback

    0%

Posts posted by ACW

  1. On 8/23/2022 at 2:56 PM, Jaspyjasp said:

    I have a 22G (36x12x12), so not small 🤣 but, i have 8 corys that will grow to about 2.2” each.
     

    How many of each (hillstream and garra) do you have, if u may ask? I just went to fish store and panda garras are so cute 😍🙈 Just want to see what combos ppl have to see what could work.

    I have them in a 40G breeder. I have 6 of the garras and, uh, around 6 of the hillstreams. I have a rocky area that I put in for the hillstreams to hide in and, well, they hide well in it. I have several paleatus cories in there as well (8-10 of 'em, from a trio I put in that decided to breed...) There is probably a clown pleco in there too--I've seen it twice in the 18 months I've had it. I also have a few amano shrimp that I moved in from another tank, so as far as clean-up crews go, I'm set, heheh. Other fish in the tank are harlequin rasboras (around 15 of 'em), to add some interest to the middle of the tank.

    Because so many of the fish are on the bottom or on the glass (or in the rocks, plants, etc.), it doesn't look overstocked, and I have a cannister filter running to keep the water moving for the hillstreams, so it hasn't really required more water changes than my less-stocked tanks.

    • Love 1
  2. At the height of the pandemic, I ordered 9 Denison barbs (a.k.a. torpedo barbs or roseline sharks) from an online retailer at half off.. A week later, another box from the same retailer showed up with another 9 Denison barbs. They'd had a computer issue and couldn't determine which orders they'd sent out the previous week, so they just sent all their customers a second order. So, 18 fish for half the cost of 9.

    Now that they're almost 5" long, it makes for an impressive school, though I could use a larger tank. 

    • Like 3
  3. I have both in the same tank. I'd rate the hillstreams a little higher on algae cleaning, but the panda garras are entertaining goofballs. With a 12 gallon tank, the panda garras might be a tad big though--mine are in the 3 1/2 inch range and pretty chunky. That said, panda garras are one of my favorite fish (there's nothing like trimming your plants, feeling something on your arm, and realizing that you've got 5 fish trying to clean you off), so it's hard not to recommend them.

    • Love 1
  4. I got 6 of those about 18 months ago. I now have at least 25 spread out into 3 separate tanks. In any case, I mostly use fine gravel or sand, but in one tank, I have river pebbles/rocks in a corner, and it almost seems like they enjoy it more--an enrichment activity or something.

    • Like 1
    • Love 1
  5. Bolivian rams will happily eat cherry shrimp--I found that out yesterday*. As you mention that you're not too concerned about your neocaridina becoming a snack, that doesn't rule them out, and honestly they colored up very nicely after a tasty red meal. The rams have been peaceful with everything else in the tank though (rasboras, ember tetras, panda garras). 

    (*I was cleaning out a semi-abandoned tank, and found I had at least 150 more shrimp in there than I'd realized, so I tossed a few into the tank with the rams while putting in a half-dozen kuhli loaches that I'd thought were long-gone as well. All in all, the tank wasn't nearly as abandoned as I'd thought...)

    • Thanks 1
    • Haha 1
  6. I'm surprised this got such a discussion going--Super Glue Gel (cyanoacrylate) is sold at AquariumCoop.com in the aquascaping section, so yeah, fish-safe.

    I've used it for sticking wood to rocks and sticking plants to wood or rocks, and it works great. For small sticks, it really only takes a small dab to hold them down until they waterlog. It doesn't dry clear, so try to hide the glue points as best you can.

    • Like 1
  7. On 2/18/2022 at 6:59 AM, Anon said:

    It's concerning to see there's a shiny new pleco every other year, or is that just me? What do you guys think? Would you still keep fish if we stopped introducing new species? Do you personally keep wild-caught fish as pets? Do you see your fish as a collection and try to obtain the species newest to the hobby? 

    When it comes to plecos, I, well, choose not to afford the particularly rare and "new" breeds. Once they are being tank-bred, the price comes down, and I get interested in getting them.

    If new species of fish stopped appearing, that is not a big deal to me. There's a huge number of "known" species I've never kept, and a half dozen I've had and would love to keep again.

    I personally have some wild-caught fish, but it isn't my preference--I'm a loach lover, and some aren't easy to breed, purportedly. If I have the choice of tank-raised or wild-caught, I pay extra for tank-raised.

    My fish are pets. 

    • Like 1
  8. I did see that video, and coincidentally I had just lost an apisto to an illness after feeding bloodworms. One fish isn't definitive--another in the tank definitely ate some with no issues--but I have ceased feeding frozen bloodworms to my apistos, just in case. 

    So, I'd also like to hear more opinions. 

  9. You've probably heard this before, but use cool water when doing a water change. About an hour later, lots of eggs all over the glass. I've gone from 5 to 30 paleatus corys without doing anything beyond that. The same technique got my pygmy corys laying eggs too, but they, uh, really enjoy caviar, so those eggs would need to be pulled.

    • Like 2
    • Sad 1
  10. Hello...

    I had a couple of tanks growing up and through college, then took a break from the hobby in my 20s. Last year, my wife passed away from cancer, and I decided a fish tank would be a good distraction for my kids and me. Now there's 4 tanks (plus a QT tank), and my daughter has decided I have enough.

    I disagree.

    The picture below is of my oldest, yet newest tank. I started with a 20g with a few platties, and they decided a 40G was more their speed.

    PXL_20210831_230416996.jpg

    • Like 3
    • Love 2
  11. No issues with eating--like all my Denisons, it eats fast and as much as it can get. Early on, I noticed it was getting bullied, but that seems to have stopped as all those barbs have gotten older. My nitrates run a little high due to bio-load (long story short, I have more fish in there than I planned on or paid for...), so I do regular water changes.

    What really throws me though is that its color doesn't stabilize--it keeps cycling between 'fake albino' and standard.

  12. I've had a group of Denison barbs for several months now. All of them have been healthy, but one has a very weird trait--its coloration keeps changing. When I got them, all had the same markings, but after 2 months, one began to lose its color entirely. After a few weeks, it looked like an albino. I tried and failed to catch it to medicate it, as it otherwise seemed completely healthy. It eats well, swims fast, is a similar size to the others I bought at the same time, etc. After a few days of having an albino, I noticed that its black stripe was returning, and within a couple of weeks, it looked mostly normal again.

    Since then, it has regained and lost its color regularly, taking around a month to complete the cycle. The attached picture shows it halfway to recovering all color (with a non-color-morphing Denison at the top-left for comparison).

    I'm guessing a stomach parasite maybe?

    20210813_115441(0).jpg

×
×
  • Create New...