Jump to content

LuckyFishGuy

Members
  • Posts

    11
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Feedback

    0%

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

LuckyFishGuy's Achievements

Apprentice

Apprentice (3/14)

  • First Post
  • Collaborator
  • Reacting Well
  • Conversation Starter
  • Week One Done

Recent Badges

44

Reputation

  1. As a Cichlid keeper I am always on the lookout for large rocks to furnish my aquarium, some that I've collected are over 70 lbs. (and are of course my fishes favorites) While in the lawn and garden section of my local menards I found these resin rocks designed to cover unsightly utilities. Man it would be WAY easier to use hollow rocks like this in my tanks. Has anyone used something like this before? What should I be looking out for in fish behavior/ water parameters to tell me that these are not aquarium safe? I bought a medium size one and will chuck it in a tank tonight.
  2. Here is a cool one, twin half moon tanks in a school for children with disabilities. one side has a trio of 10+ year old blood parrots and the other has been taken over by neolamprologus brichardi and a half blind frontosa.
  3. I wanted to share one of the most rewarding tanks I service. This clients husband was a hobbyist that built a bar in his basement / man cave and put an old 55 gallon tank in the wall behind the bar. His kids grew up enjoying this tank full of tiger barbs, albino corydoras and a red tailed shark. Unfortunately the husband died unexpectedly. Instead of packing the tank up his wife decided to have us come out and service the tank with the goal of preserving it in her husbands memory. We kept everything the way he had it replacing fish as needed for the past 7 years.
  4. The Reef tank that I just posted is our only client that uses apex. generally if you even know about apex then you have no problem doing your own maintenance. In that particular clients case he travels for work extensively and enjoys checking up on his tank remotely.
  5. We do have a few clients with reef tanks but there are some practical reasons to why its not popular. The biggest factor being cost, cost of the corals themselves, additional equipment, and the time and effort it takes to keep them happy. For most saltwater clients we bring pre mixed saltwater in buckets to do the water change. Well on a reef tank its preferred that the client have a mixing station in their home/ business so we can mix to the exact ideal salinity for their tank. This also means the added cost of a RODI unit and upgraded lighting has to be factored in to the clients costs. then when you break the news that the pretty trigger, puffer or in some cases angels are not reef safe it simplifies the decision. Add on the fact that most clients are not hobbyists and cant tell the difference between live coral and the fake stuff it just makes sense. Planted tanks are much more common on our client list (probably because I push them so often) but regionally our water is hard with a high PH (7.8- 8.3) meaning the African cichlid is king, so no aquascapes here. For the most part clients want big colorful fish and a tank that looks full, with as little input from them as possible. The most difficult part about my job is constantly reminding myself that 99% of my clients are not big hobbyists and just want their customers to have something pretty to look at. Unfortunately most cant tell an mbuna from a peacock or a tang from a wrasse.
  6. I agree! It makes it so nice to work on the tank with the furniture pulled off.
  7. I am almost a year into my role as a maintenance tech for a large store in the Chicago suburbs, I figured it would be fun to share some interesting clients tanks, cool new aquarium installs, current favorite fish in the store, and fun perks of professional fishtankery. Here is one of my favorite saltwater tanks. This one is interesting because the client had this cabinet face custom made by a carpenter. All of the doors are functional for quick feedings but the whole front and sides are on sliders so it can be easily pulled away from the tank for easy maintenance.
  8. Ph 7.8-8.2 /gh 300+/kh 300+ as you could imagine Val and anubias do well for me 😂
  9. @NordernAquariums it showed no progress for almost 3 weeks then BAM 😂
  10. Thanks Alison! I’m lucky in the fact that my partner doesn’t mind them as long as I keep them “looking nice” 😂
  11. Hi everyone I’ve been keeping fish for I think 5 years only seriously in the past 3. My dad however has been keeping cichlids off and on for 10. Lately I’ve found myself attracted to (fewer) larger tanks and see myself moving moving in that direction. I enjoy natural looking planted tanks (low tech so far). I love to learn and am looking forward to gaining and spreading knowledge of this fantastic hobby! A bit about my tanks and their current stocking 20L - (8)star sapphire (growing out) 29- (15) tiger barbs, (15) serpae tetras, (5) Agassizi cories ,(1) juv blood parrot 47- (2) angelfish “I hate this tank” lol 75- (8) M. Parva “sunset rainbows” from Gary Lange, (4) angelfish, (3) geophagus tapajos 75- empty and awaiting the star sapphires -bucket list fish- Cyathoparyax furcifer raizba protomelas virgatas ophthalmotilapia Sp
×
×
  • Create New...