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Power outage!


Martin
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Hey all, the winter freeze has knicked out our power.  As such, filtration is out and so is temperature regulation.  My tank has 10 tetras, 2 nerites, and 5 ghost shrimp in a semi-heavily planted tank.  Can anyone give any low-tech method to help until power returns and also how long a 10-gallon tank will last oxygen-wise?  I've been distyrbing the water on a regular basis but nit sure if I'm doing enough.  Thank you.

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Hi @Martin, oh man.. well, I live in hurricane ally (AKA North Carolina), and since flow now have a whole home generator (7 days without power, and 100 degrees.. no thanks) BUT before that, I purchased these Anker Wireless USB chargers (sold on Amazon). when a storm was coming, I would have them charged up and ready to go. However, I have to wonder if they exist for the use of powering regular plug ins. 

I also use the Air stones and filters sold on Aquarium co op which are all USB. If you have that, then when you lose power you could easily use the Anker wireless USB to keep your tanks filters/air stones going! 

 

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Hey, @Martin, ugh. I've been paralyzed with fear that we'll lose power and I will be faced with your dilemma. Last night, I read this excellent article by FishLab, EMERGENCY! How to save your tank in a power outage.

I wish I had read it months ago and actually gotten myself prepared. He mentions using common household materials to make a source of air for the tank.

@Fish Folkgives good advice, just based on what I read in the article. I would love to hear what others suggest, as I'm sure a lot of people are currently faced with this problem.

Good luck and stay safe!

 

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The best advice is to be prepared because closing the barn door after the horse got out just isn't as effective. Cory has a great video on having an emergency kit for power failures/emergencies.

The first thing is to ensure the comfort of you and your family...ensuring your cell phone is charged, battery operated radio, you have heat, food, water, batteries, alternate lighting... (in case the outage is extended).

For the fish, the previous advice is sound...

- Use battery operated air pumps where you can.

- Unplug any external filters so when the power comes back on bad water isn't pumped back in.

- If external. put any bio-media inside the tank to keep the BB alive.

- insulate the tank with blankets to reduce temperature loss.

- If the outage will be extended, perhaps you can temporarily relocate the fish (5g bucket) somewhere there is power?

Hope you get through it okay.   🙂

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I decided to do a water change to get rid of snail poop and detritus that was stuck all over my sponge filter, since my options are somewhat limited due to lack of planning. A clean tank is a good start, I figured, plus, I filled several gallon jugs with clean water in prep for doing water changes if I get ammonia spikes. I was happy I bought some "pest" snails, but snail poop is some serious stuff. I saw one on a plant that looked just like the poop emoji (without the facial expression).

Will stop feeding the tank, also. Fingers crossed I don't have to do more.

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Thanks guys!  It was just junk timing that this winter storm hit us shortly after getting this tank off the ground.  Currently, the fish don't seem affected by the situation.  They are swimming around per usual fashion.  The water parameters have held stable with pH of 7.0, zero nitrates and minimal nitrate.  I removed a portion of the water and heated it over the stove and returned it to the tank.  I want to believe the plants are oxygenating sufficiently, but am still agitating the water regularly just to be safe.  This evening, I will wrap the tank in a towel and then do a PWC with some heated water.  I'm hoping that will help replenish the O2 and heat for half the night.  I'll likely wake up around 2am or so to maintenance if needed.  In the morning, I'll resume today's routine if the power hasn't returned.  Thanks again all.

Edited by Martin
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15 minutes ago, Martin said:

This evening, I will wrap the tank in a towel and then do a PWC with some heated water

Just use caution with adding heated water. Adding 100+ degrees Fahrenheit water into a tank that's resting around 60 degrees Fahrenheit may shock sensitive fish to death. Better to heat water, add that to a bucket of tank water to balance off shock-heat, and then add the larger volume with less heat. 

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48 minutes ago, Fish Folk said:

Just use caution with adding heated water. Adding 100+ degrees Fahrenheit water into a tank that's resting around 60 degrees Fahrenheit may shock sensitive fish to death. Better to heat water, add that to a bucket of tank water to balance off shock-heat, and then add the larger volume with less heat. 

Oh sorry @Fish Folk, should have been more clear.  By heated, I mean about 80 to 85 degrees in an amount that would constitute a roughly 20% PWC into water that is currently about 68 degrees.  I figure the temp would be roughly low 70s if I did that.  I think that should be safe.  Thoughts?

Edited by Martin
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One other note of caution with water changes.  You don't know how much disolved O2 is in your tap water.  it could be quite low (there's no air in pipes).  heating water lowers its capacity to hold O2 so adding warm water add less-oxygenated water.  also without lights plants will eat their sugars and outgas co2 and not o2.  Lastly, adding dechlorinators also use up oxygen to do their work.

 

I think within reason letting your tank hit room temp (assuming you have gas heating and the house is still 68-70F) is far less dangerous than doing a lot of intervention if your worry is oxygen and you don't have an emergency USB pump or something. 

 

I'm not sure but I think many aquarium fish are fine at even lower temps for hours or days too.  they just get lethargic.  Hopefully someone with more experience can chime in on this point.

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10 hours ago, Sandra the fish rookie said:

Hi @Martin, oh man.. well, I live in hurricane ally (AKA North Carolina), and since flow now have a whole home generator (7 days without power, and 100 degrees.. no thanks) BUT before that, I purchased these Anker Wireless USB chargers (sold on Amazon). when a storm was coming, I would have them charged up and ready to go. However, I have to wonder if they exist for the use of powering regular plug ins. 

I also use the Air stones and filters sold on Aquarium co op which are all USB. If you have that, then when you lose power you could easily use the Anker wireless USB to keep your tanks filters/air stones going! 

 

They actually do I have some but not for my fish as I have a whole home generator 

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@CT_, thanks for that information, though sadly too little too late.  I guess I will have to keep an eye on the tank.  I did a roughly 20% PWC with 85 degree water.  The fish seem to be okay, but I might have to agitate the water for a bit.  Thanks for the chemistry/biology lesson... hopefully no major issues tonite.

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Phew!  Power is back on and there are no dead bodies to clean up!  Thank you all for all of your suggestions.  Ultimately, I ended up doing regular manual water agitation every few hours, stopped feeding (ty @Fish Folk!), wrapped the aquarium in blankets (ty @MJV Aquatics!), and floated bags of heated water in the tank (ty @Streetwise!).  I have no doubt the animal life in that tank was saved by everyone's' combined efforts and care.  Thank you!

Now, I get to hop online and buy all the stuff to avert this sort of thing in the future.  💰💰💰

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 2/15/2021 at 9:50 AM, Martin said:

Thanks so much guys!  I'm hoping the plants will offset some of the oxygenation issues.  I tried to rig my vacuum into a primitive water return to keep oxygenation going, but to no avail.  We will see!

 

Hey, I've wondered how you made out with your power outage. I hope all went OK and power is restored. Edited to add, I could have just read your post from Feb. 16. I missed it. 🙃

Edited by Celly Rasbora
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