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Flumpweesel

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Posts posted by Flumpweesel

  1. My initial thought is that the gas exchange in a tank without flow may be an issue so I would throw a airline in and as some very wise people on here often tell me if you are adding an air stone you may as well have a sponge or box filter attached. 

    From everything I have read and heard about shrimp is that they do better in well oxygenated water especially when they moult.  I have a similar set up to you but with a sponge filter it is incredibly low maintenance I just wish mine was a lidded tank because top offs is the main issue. 

     

     

    • Like 1
  2. I remember there were some old posts about using sodium thiosulphate  but I'm struggling to find them. 

    So is anyone using it as a dechlorinator instead of the big brand preparations and if so how are you dosing it ?

     

  3. I do water changes when I have time the inclination and the garden would like a dirty fish water boost. I have heavily planted tanks and they can go months without a change in the measurable parameters . 

    I personally think its is better to be guided by the changes in the water than to stick to routine as you will help you build in a better crisis buffer.  I know that if something happened and I couldn't get to my tanks they would cope well over 6 months with moderate feeding ( easier to find a feeder than a cleaner) that is very unlikely to ever be the case but when my mains water had boil notice one summer it saved a lot of worry  and money. 

    It is your tank do what you want but I do say find your stress points they are useful when life gets in the way. you may also find that the plants do a bit better if they get a bit more Nitrate

    • Like 3
  4.  

    On 4/9/2024 at 3:47 PM, lefty o said:

    nothing but clouds yesterday, but i did see the one in 1977! back then we had a sheet of paper with a pencil hole to look through.

     Mine was in 1999. nearly every talk show and newspaper had instructions on how to make viewers from cereal boxes. 

    • Like 2
  5. On 4/9/2024 at 3:23 PM, jwcarlson said:

    Also a little sad to have co-workers in awe that decreased solar output causes the air to cool and all I could think to say to their exclamations was "This happens every night." 😄

    😂 never underestimate the ignorance others 

    • Haha 3
  6. Just curious - I watched one once a very long time ago and silence that accompanied it was quite spooky. The birds all stopped singing it was the strangest hush. 

    Obviously it wasn't visible for me this time not that we see the sun very often in this soggy corner of the UK. 

  7. I've had a of a think on this and no idea's at all on cultures but the best way to grow one in to my mind would be to only fill the tank a couple of cms deep light it well so there are no dark spots and add fertilizer. 

    If you try and grow it in a full tank you will get algae forming every where and nearest the light source first so you will be forever scraping it off where you don't want it. 

    Also no matter what you do you will probably get more than one sort of algae so you will need to manage that manually. 

    You will get some dieback if you later add plants and décor as these will compete or add shade

    • Love 1
  8. The most important part of treating for ammonia burn is keeping the water parameters as good as possible, this is the same as any burn of cut you get keep it clean while it heals. Guppies are pretty good at getting over these thigs once the cause has been removed but it will take time to heal 

    Adding meds to a tank you having to water change that much will be very expensive so I would caution against it.  Make sure you are testing for ammonia and keep it as low as you can, you are in a "fish in cycle" now so vigilance is key .  It can take a while to get a tank out of this stage because to keep the ammonia down you are keeping the nitrates and nitrites very low so the bacteria count doesn't build very quickly.  If you haven't already I would recommend watching Cory's presentations on cycling.

    • Thanks 1
  9. I've never used RO water but my understanding is that it often needs minerals adding, obvious we are working with what you have here so I would suggest doing minimal water changes just to manage the spike rather than a large change to prevent your parameters going all over the place.  

    Hopefully people who you use RO normally will chime in soon

    Cheap bottled drinking water is often recommended

    • Like 1
  10. Glad to hear you have found a balance,  I had been wondering where you have gone but due to a change in my job I've not been on here much this year either. 

    Life is full of things that we can control and things that we can't.  So with what we can we must keep it as stress free as possible.

     

    • Like 3
  11. The dirty fish idea is a misnomer in my opinion but it is a simple way to explain that some fish will need more attention than others.  If you fed one tetra the same volume of food as one goldfish in the same size tank ect  you would probably see the  water behave very similarly. Although a hungry goldfish will trash your decor. 

    This is why if you ghost feed to seed a tank you need to do it to match the planned population 

  12. I love goldfish but they are a lot of work, my main tank when housing 2 goldfish was a water change and gravel vac very 2 maybe 3 weeks, same tank with less filtration and tropical community water change at 3 maybe 4 months and mainly because I feel like rearranging rather than urgent keep them alive maintenance. 

    So I understand the dilemma you are in, I say try some "easier" fish you'll probably enjoy it and you might find the reduced stress of not having to manage a population a nice change. My egg layers do breed but never get out of control as I do nothing to protect eggs or fry aside from feeding fine powder foods every now and then and lots of hiding places due to my plants and hardscape. 

    The joy of the hobby is with the right tweaks tanks can be set up and stocked to provide joy without being a burden on time and strength. 

    However its the breeding you enjoy the most maybe get into shrimp their bioload  is so low they rarely crash tank so you can leave it be when your body needs you to and no harm will come to them. 

    You will probably always have guppies though but maybe not in every tank 

    • Like 1
  13. I did this in my 60 US Gal tank  and I don't believe they ever saw each other its heavily planted.  I will say though that I had two Betta's and the first one I put in the big tank really didn't like it and just sat in a corner for days until I gave up and moved her back to the 20litre but the other girl was fine from the the get go.   

    I think that was just agoraphobia though nothing to do with my Apisto she rarely goes more than a few inches from the tank floor. 

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