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  L# Major replant - finally happened...
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SubscribeMajor replant - finally happened...
tetratech
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male usa
My two male pencilfish do that as well, but I don't think they are "doing it" They constantly battle for the center of the tank.

My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 01-Mar-2006 19:57Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Well, I figure I'm not around enough to notice if they pick at the underside of the leaves. 3 hours a day, tops, is what I see of the tank.

Wow - it's pretty wild when I think of it that way. All that work and thinking and grinding and gnashing of teeth for 1-3 hours a day of viewing, mostly less on the weekends.

Tetra. No no, though. This was different. I've learned well the I'm the boss dance, as LF calls it. The males touch bodies but not like this. The gourmai weren't just gettin' busy - they were gettin busAY!


Back in the saddle!
Post InfoPosted 01-Mar-2006 20:05Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
LITTLE_FISH
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All that work and thinking and grinding and gnashing of teeth for 1-3 hours a day of viewing


You are right, I haven't even thought about it this way. I have maybe half an hour during weekdays to admire my beautiful tanks . But I have a little more time on weekends, in particular during the 2 hour maintenance routine for the 125G.

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 02-Mar-2006 11:13Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
mattyboombatty
 
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they were gettin busAY!


Dirty. That's just wrong.



I like the jungle, and obviously the gouramies do to. Looks good.



Critical Fertilator: The Micromanager of Macronutrients
Post InfoPosted 02-Mar-2006 18:08Profile Homepage PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Tank update: Awful news on the Fishy front.

So I came back from a long weekend away to find sveral of my fish dying and diseased. Two harleys were swimming very erratically and had patches of white fuzz on their backs and dorsal fins. Not covered, but patches. I took them out and put them down, they seemed beyond help. Then I saw my BN, and HE has the white patches on his head/ side area, but much bigger. I took him out and put him in a Q tank for treatment. Problem is I dont know what to treat with

Maracyn says it can be used to treat body fungus, but I recently used that in my tank and these white patches came about AFTER the treatment. A bunch of stuff has been going wrong these past few weeks, from fish deaths to algae outbreaks etc. I'm trying to pinpoint what coul dhave caused all this mess.

1.) Introduction of sparkling gourami: they coul dhave brought some nasties into my tank, but they had been under observation at the LFS for 2 weeks before I bought them and showed no signs of ailment

2.) New piece of DW: I cleaned it thoroughly with bleach, I doubt it's this.

3.) New food: switched over to feeding them NLS. Not sure but maybe the change of diet upset their immune systems?

Additionally, as you may know I have been getting ammonia readings recently. Not high, but there. I wonder if the ammonia presence is connected to any of the algae problems I've been having, or the fish health. I know ammonia is bad for them, but it's there in very very low levels. Wargh Any ideas?

I feel especially bad about the BN, because I had been preparing to sell him. I can't help but think I gave him some bad Fishy karma...


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Post InfoPosted 06-Mar-2006 17:23Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Sorry to hear about all the problems. My first reaction is:

1. What happened over the weekend. Was their a power outage, temp fluct, overfeeding, etc.?

2. Are you running the UV 24/7?

3. How are the plants. I know you have some algae, but are they growing fast, etc.



My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 06-Mar-2006 18:30Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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hey tetra,

1.) No, nothing happened over the weekend. Weather was very nice here, no storms to create a a blackout, no tell tale signs like blinking alarm clocks etc.

2.) Yes, the UV is running 24/7. I thought the UV was supposed to protect against something like this I remember reading an argument somewhere for leaving them on during lights on, but i forget what it was.

3.) Plants are doing OK. Not good, I've seen them much better. I can tell they're no doing their best because the wisteria is growing quite slow... for wisteria anyway. I've been dosing the same as normal. I experimented with slowing down N, but stopped and sped back up to normal. But they are growing pretty slow, not as fast as normal. That's the other issue I'm trying to work out, and I'm sure that's connected to the algae issue.

But in the mean time I'm trying to figure out how to stop my fish from dying...


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Post InfoPosted 06-Mar-2006 20:20Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Obviously no signs of too much co2, doesn't sound like it.
Are you running a stream or what's the bps count.
What are you treating with now.

The UV should deplete the pathogens in the water unless the flow rate thru the UV is too fast to do so. The pathogen kill requires a slower flow than the protist kill.

My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 06-Mar-2006 21:34Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Well, as many have noted, I've had to lower my bps when i put in the glass diffuser. It's nowhere near a stream, maybe 1-2bps. No signs of classic CO2 stress, but that assumes white body patches are not a sign of too much CO2. No gasping etc.

As for treatment the only thing I've been dosing is melafix because I have no idea what else to use. Like I said, I've used Maracyn in this tank as per the package directions and it's supposed to treat things like body fungus, yet this appeared after that treatment and was used on all the fish presently in the tank. Wouldn't the disease causing bacteria/ fungus be killed durin gthe first treatment?


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Post InfoPosted 06-Mar-2006 21:47Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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EditedEdited by tetratech
http://www.aquariumpharm.com/pimafix.html
Personally I would use pimafix with the melafix than you have your bases covered.

From what your describing it sounds like an infection from high nh3 or no3.

BTW - Many times when you treating with meds you end up getting a secondary infection. Oh you were treating the BGA with marayacan, right!





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Post InfoPosted 06-Mar-2006 21:54Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Yes, I treated the BGA with maracyn, not for the fish. They weren't even sick at the time.

So you think it's from high NO3 or ammonia? I'm having trouble understanding then. I know my NO3 isn't that high and has been at a fairly consistent level for quite a while now. What would make this stressful to them all of a sudden?


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Post InfoPosted 06-Mar-2006 23:14Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Yes, I treated the BGA with maracyn, not for the fish. They weren't even sick at the time

Anyone's quess, but the kill off of BGA could have raised nh3 levels in the tank and opened the door to a bacterial infection.

Fish disease is not my strong suit, so maybe other's will chime in. High NH3 can bring out infections in fish.



My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 00:30Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
upikabu
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Sorry to hear about your fish, Nowhere.

I definitely don't think it's the food switch (especially to NLS, which is supposedly the "best" food out there). My guess is the ammonia level. Is it possible for the maracyn to kill enough good bacteria for the NH3 to be detectable? Did you notice the ammonia not long after you added maracyn?

It might be worth creating a thread in the Hospital forum. Someone with more experience with diseases can probably help better. Good luck!

-P
Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 03:41Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
Dr. Bonke
 
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2.) New piece of DW: I cleaned it thoroughly with bleach, I doubt it's this.


Could it maybe be this? Maybe your driftwood has soaked up a lot of bleech during the cleaning process and is now leeching it back into the water? I'm not a fan of using anykind of bleech treatment of things that I am going to use in my tank. Considering that the normal usage of bleech is to kill off any bacteria in your toilet, I do not want anything like it in my tank. Rocks might be alright to clean with it but wood... I'm not saying that this is your definate problem, but the sodium hypochlorite would be on my list of things that may irritate/affect your fish' slimecoat.

Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 06:55Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Considering that the normal usage of bleech is to kill off any bacteria in your toilet, I do not want anything like it in my tank.




I didn't just soak the wood in bleach and then put it in the tank, I scrubbed it with bleach, but then soaked it for a few days in a tank with 4X dose of Prime. Rinsed, resoak, rinse resoak. I don't think the bleach is leeching out, I was wondering if the bleech didn't kill any micro-organisms etc in the wood... but then the UV should have killed them eventually.

Anyway, I had a hell of a night last night. I did some filter cleaning but couldn't get the damn thing restarted. It just wouldn't fill with water and whenever I plugged it in it sounded like it was running dry. At one point I even electrocuted myself when unplugging the horribly noisy filter after another failed attempt at restarting it. Finally, a few hours after being first unplugged, and well into the AM hours, it started like magic. It probably didn't matter at that point though, most bacteria were probably dead after an hour or so at most. So this was surely a wonderful development considering my already present ammonia problems.

And on top of that, the BN has gotten worse, not eatig, pretty listless.

Anyway, thanks for all your help on the sick fish situation, appreciate the effort


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Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 17:15Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Anyway, I had a hell of a night last night. I did some filter cleaning but couldn't get the damn thing restarted. It just wouldn't fill with water and whenever I plugged it in it sounded like it was running dry.

Don't hesiate to PM if your having a problem with the Eheim.

Usually that will happen if it's not completely filled with water. You have to open and start the siphon going again.



My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 17:24Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
FRANK
 
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Hi Guys,

You might want to read this site:
http://puffernet.tripod.com/maracyn-two.html

Basically, you killed off your bacterial colonies that
were breaking down the ammonia to nitrite to nitrate and
now in addition to the now "bad" water, you are recycling
the tank.

Treating that form of "algae" with any of the "cyn"
drug family will kill off the beneficial bacteria as well
as the "bad" stuff.

Another possibility when trying to eliminate that form
of algae is the use of Hydrogen Peroxide administered to
the infected areas with a syringe or turkey baster.
http://www.thekrib.com/Plants/Algae/hydrogen-peroxide.html

Frank


-->>> The Confidence of Amateurs, is the Envy of Professionals <<<--
Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 17:57Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Notes from Mardel on biological filtration: "Nitrobacter and Nitrosomonas are recognized as the primary beneficial bacteria present in the biological filtration system of any aquarium. Some drugs which treat fish diseases and parasitic infestations are harmful to these 'good' bacteria. When the biological filter is upset, there is a buildup of ammonia and nitrite concentrations resulting in fish distress and death. Mardel products have been tested with known strains of these bacteria with no adverse effects noted. When used as directed, they do not interfere with the biological filter."


That site says it does NOT harm the benefical bacteria

My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 18:10Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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That site says it does NOT harm the benefical bacteria


Normally I wouldn't believe what's written on these fish medications. Ich medications often claim to be harmless to scaleless fish but in fact are not. I looked around for user information on the stuff and many people have had success using Maracyn for this purpose, including LF, so I had faith in it. I examined my bio-filter last night and it looked good and gunked up, not like it had been depleted at all.

A moot point now, of course, since the filter was left sitting idle for a few hours last night, so the bacteria probably mostly died out.

Tonight I'll go back to the old fail safe - a large water change and partial gravel vac - and hope for the best.


Back in the saddle!
Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 23:21Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Nowher,
How are the fish? What's the biggest algae problem right now?

My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 07-Mar-2006 23:23Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Well, just to summarize a bit here:

The algae problems started first. Hair algae is the main problem with a bit of staghorn developing as well. The hair algae is most virulent on the bacopa carolina near the filter outflow. It's growing in both green and red varieties. It is easily removed by hand or by python, but grows back quite quickly. It also appears in the HM, though not as much. And for the most part, the hair algae grows up near the light, not so much down the stem.

The growth of all this algae then led me to test for ammonia, which I found to be present in the tank. I've been working to keep it down, but it still registers in traces.

Then recently I noticed the white patches on the fish. It started with two rasboras who had it for a few days while I was away. They were acting quite sick, swimming erratically and occasionally floating - those two I put down. Now my BN is covered on his left side with the white patches. He's now in a Q tank and as of last night was not doing well at all.


That's where things stand with this big tank mess. I assume it was something I screwed up during my EI dosing schedule. I'm not sure what, but it was as follows:

~1/4 tsp KNO3 3X per week, sometimes a little more, sometimes a little less

~1/8 or less K2SO4 at the same time

one capful (5ml) Flourish 3X per week on off days

recently 1ml Flourish Iron per week for the Rotala

1ml P dosed with the other macros per week

This is all pretty standard stuff here, the only difference is sometimes I went maybe 8 days without a WC rather than 7.

So that's the situation then. When it rains, it pours




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Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 00:41Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Having nh3 is definitely a problem. Did you have that much BGA that it would have given you that much when you killed it. Maybe that and it did kill your biofilter and you added more fish. Also I think you said your plants weren't growing as fast, so everything was going in the wrong direction. More fish mass, less plant mass, less biofilter. What is your current lighting schedule by wpg and hours. Your plants should be really sucking up alot of ferts, but it seems like they're not.

My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 02:01Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
Wingsdlc
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Is it posible to test how much your plants take up? I just got my test kit and I am starting to over think things I think. Once the plants hit a point they are not going to want to take up as much right? Could that be some of the problem?

55G Planted tank thread
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Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 03:53Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
bensaf
 
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Once the plants hit a point they are not going to want to take up as much right? Could that be some of the problem?


Why? Nutrients aren't going to make fish sick unless you push nitrate up to really high levels.

After dosing the Maracyn and killing the BGA what did you do. What happened to the BGA ? Maracyn won't make it evaporate ! Killing off a large quantity of any organism in one fell swoop is going to cause problems. Those dead organics are going to cause problems.

From the sounds of the syptoms something has been irritating the fishes skin. A healthy unstressed fish will shake off fungus easily.


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Remember that age and treachery will always triumph over youth and ability.
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 04:03Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
cynical
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As i was reading the last few posts i was thinking
and about a year ago a lake that i used to ski at had BGA problems.. besides the major list of problems people reported. a common one was irritated skin.

maybe it was the BGA that caused the fish problems, and the maracyn took out your good bacteria.. and the high ammonia levels stressed the fish to the point that it was hard to shake the skin 'infection?' caused the the BGA

-note: i had BGA in my tank a while back, i never used maracyn just turned the lights off few a few days, but i did get fish deaths, my panda corydoras dropped like flies..

buggered if i know what I'm talking about, but other people experiences with things are always handy.

Cynical
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 05:12Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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After dosing the Maracyn and killing the BGA what did you do. What happened to the BGA ? Maracyn won't make it evaporate ! Killing off a large quantity of any organism in one fell swoop is going to cause problems. Those dead organics are going to cause problems.



Well, as I've done in the past after blackouts, after doing the indicated dose I did a large water change and sucked up as much of the dead BGA as possible. But you may be on to something with the dead organics thing, I imagine that perhaps my water quality wasn't as good as I thought.

I just did a large water change and got as much algae out as possible, as well as whatever organic mass I could find and dig up. Not sure if it's related or not, but I also bumped up CO2. The slow plant growth is a worry for me, and the only thing I can think of that's slowing it down is CO2. I know exactly how much macros/ micros I'm adding, the CO2 is the only inexact thing so I figure why not push it up some and see if I can get the plants going again. Besides, doesn't staghorn indicate a lack of CO2?

As for fish health, step one has got to be improving WQ. No more harley deaths, and the BN seems to be stable.


Back in the saddle!
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 05:43Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
bensaf
 
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So far your approach would be what I'd do in the same situation.

Increasing Co2 is always the first place to start with algae, and water changes will improve water quality. Wait it out and hopefully you're over the hump.


Some days you're the pigeon and some days you're the statue.

Remember that age and treachery will always triumph over youth and ability.
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 08:22Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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BGA usually affects new tanks because there is no established bio-filter to purify the water. All the waste is just sitting there. Any huge kill-off BGA will increase nh3 in a tank that already has probably some nh3.

Case In Point:
My son's newt/fish 10g setup has no plants in it (Actually one Mondo Grass) and all rocks. Heavy waste production and it has alot of BGA. I mean the rocks gravel and glass have nice thick dark green/blue sheets. Comes right off when you tuck gently. I recently started adding wisteria clippings to the tank all around the rock pile and I'm telling you there is almost no BGA in the tank.

BGA can be cured by alot of water changes and adding more plantmass and doing whatever you can to increase biofilteration.



My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 15:26Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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EditedEdited by tetratech
Boy this board is really dead. I guess everyone has algae problems. I guess I'll take a nap.

My knowledge of shrimp is very limited. Can anyone tell me if this shrimp is a pregant female. This shrimp has really grown. You could see how big she/he is compared to those jumbo cardinals swimming by.



Attached Image:


My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 22:51Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Life sure is tough when you've got no algae problems to figure out, huh tetra?

I've been busy ona project all day, was going to respond to the original posts soon.

But she does indeed look pregnant, very very pregnant. Is that a cherry, amano or ghost? If it's a cherry you should soon have a nice supply of snacks for those hungry cardinals Who knows maybe a few will survive in the jungle.

You recommended getting them a few pages back and I was actually looking into it. These ammonia/ algae problems are throwing me off, though, so I won't do it any time too soon. I plan on starting up a little tank to breed them, just a little desktop number, maybe use the babies as the occasional live food. But again, I want to make sure I can fix one tank before starting on another

As for the algae, BGA is no longer the problem, now it's this messy hair stuff, but I think you're right that it does in a lot of ways come back to the bio-filter and the presence of a lot of decaying organic matter. Hopefully keeping the tank cleaner and with big water changes will bring things back into balance. The increased CO2 can't hurt either.

And speaking of water changes, I just did a big one last night, and boy do I wish EI allowed you to do them more often. I love how the tank rains bubbles upwards, and the water has a noticable extra crispness to it. The fish really enjoy it as well, they color up like crazy...



Wonder how my old BN is doing right now...


Back in the saddle!
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 23:06Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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It's an amano. I do have a full cherries in there too that I do see occasionally.

I'm really out of it today, I just noticed I put this in your thread so if you want me to move it just give me the word.

I plan on starting up a little tank to breed them, just a little desktop number,

Great minds think alike. When I started up the 5 gallon for my ram fry I kept it going and have 3 cherries in there.

My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 23:19Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
Wingsdlc
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I was wondering what you were doing tetra, posting random things in his thread....

55G Planted tank thread
19G Container Pond
[IMG]http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y118/Wingsdlc/Ric
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 23:40Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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If it's an ammano (should've known, it's on the upper DW) I don't think the babies will be born or grow, something like that. I would assume she'll release the eggs at some point, in which case they'll still make a nice treat for the fish. They're the kind that need salinity to develop, cherries can breed in FW.

Great minds think alike. When I started up the 5 gallon for my ram fry I kept it going and have 3 cherries in there.


Mine is just going to be the 2.5, some DW, moss and other cover plants. Right now I'm growing out a few kinds of mosses, still need to scape the thing. All in good time. The cherries are supposed to stay small so I think I could get away with a few in the 2.5

And leave the post here, who cares. There's random rambling in all of our threads


Back in the saddle!
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 23:49Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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was wondering what you were doing tetra, posting random things in his thread....

Isn't a guy allowed a senior moment once in a while. Wait to you get older. You'll be posting fish questions in a curling forum.

My Scapes
Post InfoPosted 08-Mar-2006 23:50Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
Wingsdlc
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haha!

Well tetratech, if you need something to do you can either find LF or post something in my thread.

http://www.fishprofiles.com/files/threads/27565.1.htm?0.09523547#

55G Planted tank thread
19G Container Pond
[IMG]http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y118/Wingsdlc/Ric
Post InfoPosted 09-Mar-2006 00:06Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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EditedEdited by tetratech
The cherries are supposed to stay small so I think I could get away with a few in the 2.5


Yep, really like the cherries they also seem very hardy. My 5g has no heater and the tank swings about 10F from night to day with no ill effects.

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Post InfoPosted 09-Mar-2006 00:39Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Interesting about the temp. According to the guy at this website, they can be kept to temps down in the 50's.. not necessarily breeding, but alive and well. Pretty hardy.

He also sells the cherries, if I can't find them locally then I'm going to order from him. He's in NYC so shipping will probably be pretty fast.


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Post InfoPosted 09-Mar-2006 00:48Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Interesting. He says the females are more red, when other sites have said the males are red and the females are pale. Of the three I have one is very pale, almost no red, the other is so so and the third is very red like a cooked lobster.

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tetratech
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Here's two of the three I have. Same camera settings and look at the difference in color.



Attached Image:


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Post InfoPosted 09-Mar-2006 01:42Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
luvmykrib
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Wow what a difference! They could be different species the colour's so different. They look very nice too.

I've been afraid to get shrimp again after my homicidal ghost shrimp that figured betta would taste good. Though Buddy's a bit of a thrill seeker, he always had to get just within reach of the long feelers, they could take scales off from quite a distance.

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Hi,
I keep reading of folks having all sorts of success with
shrimp. I'd love to have some in my tank and I believe
they might be "happy" munching on what little algae is
in there. However, they simply don't last...
I've got Black Skirt Tetras, and Cherry Barbs.
I've tried Ghost Shrimp, and Cherry Shrimp, and I'm
beginning to think that I'm just serving the shrimp up
to the critters that already live there.
Heck, I even bought a bottle of Iodine with the last
batch I got from Arizona Gardens as they said that the
shrimp needed iodine in their water.

Everyone says that they are very tollerant of water
conditions.. Just dunno.

Frank


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Post InfoPosted 09-Mar-2006 02:16Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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tetra,

looks like the one on the bottom is the female to me. is it just me or is it carrying eggs on its underside? check that out a little closer dude...

frank,

i think in the presense of possible preditors some ground cover or plant cover in general would do them quite well. i can't see the cherry barbs being the aggressors, the black skirts on the otherhand... like little pirhanas...


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Post InfoPosted 09-Mar-2006 02:54Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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I wouldn't be surprised if your fish are the problem. I was near my tank earlier today and my school of cardinals were acting like I had dropped some food in and when I went closer I noticed one of my cherries had come out of hiding and they were almost going into a frenzy. I luckily got the shrimp out in time. I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it. I think my cardinals are feeling very good in the water conditions right now.

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Maybe you should feed thoughs little things more!

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NowherMan6
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Wow, I've never heard of such aggressive cardinals. Wings, they should still be stuffed from all those ram eggs/ fry tetra has been cultivating.


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Oh thats right. Maybe they are crossed with there cuz the pirhna? Taking on stuff much bigger than thereselves only because they are in a big group.

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NowherMan6
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Brief update,

Tested for ammonia last night can came up with absolute 0, was the exact color of 0 on the chart, in other words.

Maybe I didn't kill my biofilter after all... or maybe it just needs a few more days for the ammonia to build up. Regardless, it's the first good sign I've had in a while.

I'm going to do another algae trim and debris vac tonight, then try to get back on the EI regular schedule again beginning next week. The additional WC will make me feel better before I go away this weekend.


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Post InfoPosted 09-Mar-2006 17:12Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Well I'm glad the nh3 is zero. That is important.

BTW - I testing for po4 today just for the hell of it. I honestly haven't tested in months and you know what I got.

5 ppm

Now I do have some bba on glass and dw, plants are growing too well to be bothered by it. So what to do ---- Well I thought about it long enough. I'm going to pretend I never tested and continue to do what I'm doing.

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NowherMan6
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I'm sure you don't have any green spot algae though.

Algae is going to be present in every planted aquarium, it's going to be there somewhere if you look hard enough. The point is to make it nearly invisable, which you have succeeded at. You try make the plants grow, you don't try to get rid of algae - that's the theory that we know is right, even just using you and Bensaf as examples. That's the theory I - and to a much lesser extent LF and matty for example because they tinker so much when a little algae comes up - am trying to put into practice. You're doing a great job as it is, to hell with the test.

Those tests are like the little angel of good sense sitting on your shoulder, telling you to be careful. We all may be better off taking our finger and flicking him off when it comes to planted tanks. I personally stopped testing for ph and phosphate and nitrate. (Now compare this to a few thousand posts back in LF's log, when I wrote up a passionate ode to test kits... Bensaf was right again, it's probably easier to just go by what the plants tell you... GAACK!.. excuse me, just made me gag to admit that)

In other words, good call man, ignorance is bliss /:'


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Post InfoPosted 09-Mar-2006 19:23Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
bensaf
 
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EditedEdited by bensaf
Yeah, good call forget the test.

BBA on glass ? I've had BBA on everything else I've never seen it on glass.

Some algae is always going to be present. As long as it's unobtrusive and not spreading no need to bother with it.

I still get specks of it on the gravel. Easy to handle, just pull with the tweezers and the little piece of gravel comes up with it. But I haven't seen any on my Anubias, even in full light, for months and months. Compare this to a couple of years ago when the Anubias where smothered in black.

Hardly see green spot anymore, the occasional speck on the glass. I haven't seen any form of hair like algae in well over a year.I'll get a slight grey haze on the glass if I don't clean every couple of weeks.

I've got literally hundreds of Java Fern leaves now. 99.99% algae free, bright bright green.

Never ever tested phosphate. I add a lot though, about 3-5ppm per week.

I'll take it

Bensaf was right again


You're just trying to get out of that butt kicking aren't ye ?


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Post InfoPosted 10-Mar-2006 08:37Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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I've had BBA on everything else I've never seen it on glass.

Definitely on the glass, some selected eco-complete rocks which as you said I just take out and some on a few leaves of the blyxa. It doesn't touch the other plants even when they are pressed against hardscape that might have some bba. I'm 99% sure the blyxa problem is slow growth due to a light issue in the bowfront of the tank.

I know Tom Barr always says bba low co2, but in this case, I can't imagine that. The plants are growing great, pearling, etc. and the co2 is a moving stream with a glass diffusor blowing bubbles right on the plants. Even the riccia is pearling which is located in and around the blyxa.



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Post InfoPosted 10-Mar-2006 16:23Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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You're just trying to get out of that butt kicking aren't ye


I guess an Irishman never forgives/ forgets a slight made against his skirt. I shall remain on the look-out then.

tetra, definetely have seen BBA on the glass before, particularly in that one guy's tank in your "awful tank" thread, but that was really due to low CO2. Interesting that yours seems to be going against that grain, but in the spirit of your sig line, if it's not a problem, no point testing like a mad man and micromanaging to see what it could be. leave well enough alone

Anway, it's been a while since I've posted any pics, so just thought I'd put a few recent ones up.

This first one was after I did a WC last night (you can tell by the false pearling) but for about 30mins after the fact the harleys were doing this weird thing, where they just kept to this straight line schooling formation right above the tenellus carpet. Every now and then one would jump up to the front, then fall to the back and a bunch more would follow it, then they'd be still again. very strange, never saw this before:



next, just a close-up of the first time I actually got all three kinds of fish in one shot



and finally, a full tank shot using a custom white balance setting. I think it pushes the reds a little too far, but so far this is the most accurate to real life setting I've gotten out of this camera, so I'm happy about that:



You'll notice that the HM bush has really started to fill in, and I've started to move pieces of it over to the left to fill in that side.

Behind the HM bush there is a plant that I never identified, but was too pretty to toss. It's some kind of ludwigia species, the top of the leaves are a reddish green, but the undersides are bright magenta. Grows very slowly. I don'tknow where to put it in the scape, but I don't want to get rid of it.


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Post InfoPosted 10-Mar-2006 16:43Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
upikabu
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Looking nice, nowhere. I wish my HM was that bushy! What's the green stem plant between the rotala rotundifolia & the bacopa? That's not the wisteria is it? The leaves look a bit too slim to be wisteria. Or maybe it's because they're squished in the middle.

Cheers!

-P
Post InfoPosted 10-Mar-2006 16:52Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Thanks upikabu,

Your HM will grow in in no time, one it gets going watch out

The plant between the rotala and bacopa is indeed wisteria. I allowed it to grow up, and that's how it looks. It ain't called hygro. difformis for nothin'

The tenellus needs to be thinned out signifcantly, and I think overall the scape looks busy.

Also, I'm looking to replace the bacopa on the right side, i don't really care for it any more. the other area of need is right in front of the rotala, there's a missing space there. I think I may do away with that log altogether, it's kind of big and cumbersome, I dunno. Any ideas?


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Post InfoPosted 10-Mar-2006 18:12Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
Wingsdlc
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It is really starting to look almost jungle like. Has LF tanken over your tank? Maybe a nice piece of DW coming out of the tall stuff in the back would look nice.

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Post InfoPosted 11-Mar-2006 00:49Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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That's actually a pretty good call Wings. Like I said, im thinking of replacing the low piece of DW anyway. Ill have a look around ebay again

And now, like LF, I'm going to disappear for a few days (just the weekend though )

Take care everyone


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Post InfoPosted 11-Mar-2006 01:59Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
bensaf
 
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Looking really good nowher Sorry I'm getting abit choked up .....my babies are grown up now They're proper little men

Jusr a rock or piece of wood betwee the Rotala and the little bits of Wisteria in front of it would look sweet


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Post InfoPosted 11-Mar-2006 03:59Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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EditedEdited by tetratech
Loooooking good .

Very full, lush, nice soft colors. Looks like it's time to trim and work with your stems to keep triangle look.

I also agree with "My Master" in the placement of add'l dw or rock inbetween rotala and low growing driftwood.

Also remove that tall "stem plant" on the left.

BTW - That first shot with the HRs is really a beaut.

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About your fish schooling really tight. My dwarf neon Rainbows have been chiling together really tight all weekend. Maybe they don't like my girl being around..

55G Planted tank thread
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Post InfoPosted 12-Mar-2006 06:12Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Well thanks for the compliments guys, but things really aren't as good as they seem.

LF isn't the only one with major algae problems: being away this weekend, my hair algae problems EXPLODED. Long green and brown threads, maybe 8 inches long hanging from the bacopa and now rotala. Staghorn here and there. Very nasty looking. I did my best getting the big parts out with a fish net, but there's still stuff hanging here and there.

Reading through LFs thread Bensaf had a lot of helpful things to say (and thank you for not holding out on the answer too much longer!) Mainly that staghorn was the result of low macros. Perhaps with my CO2 bumped up I've been supplying insufficient N with a good amount of P. Remember, after ammonia was present in my tank I lowered my KNO3 dosing because i figured let the plants consume the ammonia first, that form of N is already there. But I was dosing P three times a week to go with the lower N. Ammonia is no longer present - tested last night, the only test I still use - so I think I'll clean out some more stuff and get that N back up.

But that's not the worst part. Whatever disease is going through my fish continues to take a toll. Found another harley DOA, as well as my biggest yo-yo loach. That it's spread to the yo-yos disturbs me, as they've always seemed like my most happy-go-lucky bunch. Thus far it's affected every type of fish in the tank except for the gourami, which makes me think perhaps it was them that brought the disease in. The scary thing about these new deaths is that they weren't covered in white patches, they were just belly up at the surface. I'm really at a loss with this now...


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Post InfoPosted 13-Mar-2006 16:59Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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EditedEdited by tetratech
Sorry to hear about the fish and plants.

I guess vacations and planted tanks don't mix. Kinda like having a dog. Clean it up, plant densely, run the co2 high, throw in the macros and let's see.

Look on the bright side, more pics for my horrific tank thread . Speaking of horrific I wonder how Chaos is making out with his restart

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NowherMan6,

Sorry to hear about your mess with plants and fish.

I still haven't had the time to read through all the entries of your log since I left, you sure added quite a few pages (for someone who declared he will add only very little a while ago ).

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 13-Mar-2006 21:14Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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for someone who declared he will add only very little a while ago


Yeah well, that was when i thought things were running smoothly, and an update every two weeks was all that was needed. I didn't anticipate the hostile takeover by hair/ thread algae.

Sorry to hear you came home to an algae problem as well... but at least you got to enjoy a week in the tropics to prepare for it.

Clean it up, plant densely, run the co2 high, throw in the macros and let's see.


I guess that really is all I can do at this point Wargh. I'm going to take ride to the LFS and pick up some weeds and replace the bacopa. I think I trimmed the tops off the bacopa too many times without replanting, so those stems are going pretty slow which explains why they've attracted the algae growth, as opposed to the wisteria. I don't like their look anyway. I'll see what the LFS has to offer in the weed department.

Re: chaos - yeah, we haven't seen an update to his tank in a while. Wonder how many of his new glass shrimp have survived


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Post InfoPosted 13-Mar-2006 21:30Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
upikabu
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EditedEdited by upikabu
I guess vacations and planted tanks don't mix.

I'd have to respectfully disagree with this statement, tetra. Vacations and high-tech (high light, CO2 injected) planted tanks definitely don't mix IMO. But IME vacations and low-tech (low light <2wpg, non-CO2) planted tanks get along just fine. As you probably know, I left my 3 planted tanks (all low tech then) for almost 4 weeks without feeding and I only had algae problem in one tank, and it was mostly green spots and diatoms on the glass. Plants grew ok in all tanks, just bottom leaf loss in some plants due to shading. Incidentally, the one tank that had the most problem was the one that had the least amount of fish and highest light (yup, lack of nutrients).

-P
Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 01:30Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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I'd have to respectfully disagree with this statement,

Yeah, that's true. When I made that statement it was a little poke at nowher and LF who both went away and have hi-tech tanks.



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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 03:00Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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The exodus to the Promised Tank continues. My BN kicked today, along with a gourami. I'm starting to get paranoid, I'm making plans to redo parts of the tank. I'm getting rid of that new DW piece, I don't trust it. And today I pulled up the big long piece of DW and holy crap out poured, well, crap, pleco crap and other organic debris. Did a big gravel vac, tossed the algae ridden bacopa and replaced it with more wisteria (). Also trimmed the rotala and rinsed the clippings under water to get as much algae off as possible. Tank looks much cleaner already, but there's going to be a ways to go. Found staghorn in a few places, so macros are off, going to up those as discussed earlier. Pics to come at the end of the week, hopefully.

This high tech tank is no fun after vacations


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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 05:43Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
upikabu
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Hey Nowhere - sorry to hear about your entire ordeal, especially with fish loss on top of it all (fish death always bums me out the most - much more than algae). Can't offer anything constructive, except just to wish you luck in getting everything back on track soon! Hope the voodoo crap that visited your tank has now left.

Cheers!

-P
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NowherMan6,

You definately have some serious infection going on in the tank. Are you treating the tank with any medication? Do you remember what bensaf pointed out - the internal parasite issue that befalls Pearls, so maybe the Sparkling brought the same into the tank?

No fun at all

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 11:26Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Do you remember what bensaf pointed out - the internal parasite issue that befalls Pearls, so maybe the Sparkling brought the same into the tank?

Interesting since bringing in my little gourami I got those dots on my cards - interesting

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NowherMan6
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Part of me thinks it's something the gourami brought in, but not necessarily an internal parasite. I've dealt with internal parasites before - it's usually a slow drawn out process, the fish becomes emaciated and can't eat. This was sudden, with no physical signs except death (well, on the BN and one of the harleys it was some sort of white fungus/ ??? covering) but the loach and the sparkling gourami showed no other physical signs, which makes me think it's not really an internal parasite.


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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 16:33Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Sounds logical Nowher. I'll tell you if my cardinals still falling I'm filling up my tank with a nice big school of white clouds.

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it's usually a slow drawn out process


Well, maybe not. I also think to remember that bensaf mentioned that there are potentially no signs at all and all of a sudden the fish is dead.

You just may remember when I got the Pearls and one dropped dead after just one day in the QT, showing no signs what-so-ever. That's when bensaf brought up the before mentioned points.

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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 17:23Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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You just may remember when I got the Pearls and one dropped dead after just one day in the QT, showing no signs what-so-ever. That's when bensaf brought up the before mentioned points.



That's actually a very good point. Maybe I'll shoot him a PM and see if he has any more detailed info. If I come to the conclusion that it's them that introduced something to my tank, that begs the question, how do I go about dealing with them if they're all infected?

I'll tell you if my cardinals still falling I'm filling up my tank with a nice big school of white clouds


No no no! No white clouds! What ya do is, you give your old pal LF a call and you take some of his magical breeding espei off his hands. You have carnivorous pencil fish to pick off the fry so you won't be over-crowded with fry like he was, and he gets to lighted his bio-load. Everybody wins!


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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 17:59Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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No no no! No white clouds!

Don't worry I'll get some golden ones, long-finned to mix it up a bit.

Actually that probably ain't a bad idea with the espei, but let's see how my school, shoal, herd, pack or whatever reacts. Maybe they bit each other and it wasn't the gourami. Moral of the story for all of us. Fish with "lungs" are bad luck

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NowherMan6
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Moral of the story for all of us. Fish with "lungs" are bad luck


Yes indeed... and rule 1(A) to that Moral should read, If you must have a fish with lungs, ALWAYS use a quarentine tank.


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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 19:10Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
LITTLE_FISH
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tetratech,

I currently would be able to supply you with 30 juvenile Espei, but it would have to be soon as I will start to peruse the LFSs for a trade-in.

Yeah, a QT comes in handy sometimes. I am very glad that I can use my 20G for this purpose.

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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 20:31Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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I currently would be able to supply you with 30 juvenile Espei

A very tempting offer, but right now with 20 cardinals it would surely be a free for all if I added those espei, so do what you need to do, but in the future we should definitely try to trade stuff (livestock, plants, etc.) could be a good NY/NJ thing with nowher and others in the area.

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Post InfoPosted 14-Mar-2006 21:09Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
bensaf
 
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I wouldn't be too quick to blame the gouramies. From the sounds of the syptoms it's more like an infection or something irritating the skin or possibly an external parasite.

With internal parasites it's usually shown in behaviour rather then physical/marks syptoms. The sudden death thing is more attributable to fish with parasites being weakened anyway and the stress of introducing to new tank for example, being too much and they keel over ( a bit like LF's pearl and tetra's Honey).

In your case, where the fish were there for some time and settled, if the gouramies had been infected and it spread I'd expect a more long drawn out death.

Did any of the dead fish have swollen stomachs ?

A prophylactic dose of Metrodizanole will remove any possible internal parasites. It's a very mild med and won't cause any issues with healthy fish or plants.


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Post InfoPosted 15-Mar-2006 04:20Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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EditedEdited by LITTLE_FISH
NowherMan6,

That is the medicine that I bought for my Pearls when the first one died. You may remember that I couldn't get my hand on it locally as all meds here contained this substance with something else (not pure) and that was too hot for me to handle. I ordered it from the "That Pet Place" website ($50). It arrived almost a week after the Pearl died and because all other fish did fine in that week I never used it. I may still use it in the future as Bensaf suggests it as a preventive treatment on Gouramies.

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Post InfoPosted 15-Mar-2006 12:32Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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EditedEdited by tetratech
Not that I'm losing alot of fish, but I did find a dead cardinal today. (The first card lose since I started my UV) I'm still amazed at how my low tech tanks seem to do better. For example my 12 gallon sand bottom tank houses:

8 Gold Tetras
4 Black Neons
3 Otos
2 Kuli Loaches

I think you could say it's well stock and I haven't lost a fish yet (bite my tank) . I think it's been running at least six months, but I don't know because all the dates are screwed up in my thread.

I guess it's not a fair comparison because of the species. In my 72 I haven't lost any pencil fish, any bolivians, I lost one rummy in the first few weeks of setup.

My son's newt tank, no heater, had lot's of BGA and bearily any fish died. I'm also not in the camp that BGA is toxic to fish, because the BN in there was living off the stuff until I added alot of wisteria to get rid of it.



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Post InfoPosted 15-Mar-2006 19:28Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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I ordered it from the "That Pet Place" website ($50).


$50 for Metronidazole?!?!? I remember buying it about a year ago and it cost a tenth of that Wonder why the price went up... I've used metro many times myself, as recently as a few weeks ago when one of my sparkling gourami developed a large bulge around her stomache.

The only swollen stomache fish was this sparkling gourami a few weeks ago, I posted a separate thread about it. But that was a big ulcer type thing, it wasn't a symmetrical bulging stomache.

Sorry to hear about your cardinal tetra. Was it one of those with the white spot on the tail?

No more fish loss thus far. My stock is now down to the following:

12 Harlies
5 sparkling gourami
3 yo-yos

But one of the sparkling gourami, i noticed, has one of his eyes bulging out of his head. I assume this is pop-eye?

Ya know, now that I'm looking through different lists of symptoms, it may be possible that they have fish TB. Is there any way to test for this? I know TB is bacterial, but is there a way to diagnose it?


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Post InfoPosted 15-Mar-2006 20:19Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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NowherMan6,

I know nothing about TB, sorry about that.

But Here is a link to my Metronidazole.

Is that what you got for much less money?

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 15-Mar-2006 20:53Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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That's the one. Got it from Drsfostersmith a while ago. Fostersmith actually has a bottle of pure mtro for sale, it's not seachem brand but it is just metro, 20 bucks I think. That still seems high. I can't imagine why it costs so much now...


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Post InfoPosted 15-Mar-2006 21:16Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Bigals has the Hikari Metro+ 3.5 ounces for $4.99

Nowher,
Well I still have two with the dots, so unless another one developed them it was a different one.

Anyone have any success with the Jungle Anti-bacterial food or is it alot of bs

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Post InfoPosted 15-Mar-2006 23:53Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Anyone have any success with the Jungle Anti-bacterial food or is it alot of bs


I have a nearly full bottle of the stuff if you want it, though it's probably not worth the shipping cost... conceivably i could put it in a white envelope but, again, probably not worth the effort

I've used it but I don't know if it works, mainly because I don't know if my fish had a bacterial infection. My fish went after it at first, then wouldn't touch it. Plus the thing with sick fish is, they tend to not compete for food so well, so it's really going to the wrong fish.

That's why I like non-food meds, you just dump some in and the fish take it in no matter what.


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Post InfoPosted 16-Mar-2006 00:16Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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That's why I like non-food meds, you just dump some in and the fish take it in no matter what.

Point taken

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Post InfoPosted 16-Mar-2006 02:21Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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well if you put the fish in a OT then it might have some worth if the fish wants to eat or not....

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Post InfoPosted 16-Mar-2006 05:26Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
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NowherMan6,

No posts regarding this tank in over a week. I hope the fish loss has stopped and all is going ok.

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Post InfoPosted 24-Mar-2006 12:40Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Hey LF,

Yeah, I've been laying low the past few days, just doing some introspection, concentrating on the tank. The tank has gone under some pretty big changes.

But first things first: the fish loss stopped after losing two more gourami. That leaves 12 harlies, 3 gourami and 3 loaches. I have not been able to isolate the cause of the illness, or the algae outbreak for that matter.

I removed that new branch and the rocks around it, and since that time the deaths have stopped. I found it interesting that when I lifted one of those rocks, a sheet on the side of it just melted off. There seemed to be a ton of organic matter attached to it and around it. I don't know where it came from but I sucked it all up. Did a lot of other tank cleaning as well. Fish deaths stopped after that. I know it's specious reasoning to say that the two are linked, so it was probably coincidence. More likely is that the water quality improved drastically after removing the organic gunk. In any case I noticed that the yo-yos stripes became more distinct and they were more active after removing those things and the gunk, which to me indicates health.

That left the algae problem. The outbreak was/ is this long green thread or hair algae on the glass and one or two crypt leaves and this brown algae within the plant leaves that looks almost like diatoms, but threadlike as well.

A few days ago I decided to approach the problem by really looking at the plants. The wisteria told the story this time. The new/ infected leaves were dark green and generally not lush looking. Searching around I found some info indicating overly dark color in leaves was a sign of nutrient deficiencies, and in some cases N. I noticed the dark color in the tenellus leaves as well - usually both plants have bright green leaves when healthy. I know my CO2 was pushing pretty well, so to me that left N, since it seems to effect plant health more than anything else besides CO2 and light. I upped KNO3 to more than 1/4 tsp every other day, a little bit under 1/2 tsp. I also cut back very slightly on Flourish, since I was providing one full capful for my 46g tank, and that turned out to be a little more than necessary. For the past week WC schedule has been regular, once a week, but before that I was doing 2 per week. In addition I upped P dosing, as I believe I was underdosing it. K dosing remained the same.

I have to say, I'm pretty happy with the results over the past few days. Within 2 days new wisteria leaves were coming in bright green and full, not droopy. The algae was still present, but not growing and taking over as much as before, especially the brown stuff. It's still there, but it just needs to be vacuumed out. This will happen over the course of a few water changes. The very very long green thread/ hair stuff still worries me, but I removed as much as I could from the glass last night. We'll see how quickly it comes back this time around.

I still have work to do on the scaping side of things. It needs character again. Right now the tenellus is overgrown and wild. Wisteria is creeping into the tenellus. That big stem plant I have in the back left is starting to take off. Even though I personally like the jungle effect of a slightly overgrown tank, it needs some order. I'm planning out ideas of other plants to add, mainly more crypts and some small anubias nana probably. For some reason in my mind I think of them as "hard" plants - not in difficulty, just in terms of scape placement, because they're fairly static and don't change shape etc all too much. I think I'm lacking those, because the tenellus and wisteria just grow wild once settled, and there need to be some more anchors around the new DW pieces (I replaced all the old DW with self-sinking malaysian DW. Nice color too )

So that's basically where I stand right now. I'm going to lay low again for some more time, need to concentrate on the tanks, I think I was concentrating too much on posting about the tanks before rather than really paying close attention to them. Guess I'm not at the point where I can do both at once like you and tetra

And that's right, I said tanks, plural. I have my little 2.5g desktop tank set up. It features a large piece of DW, and I've got some slow growers in there. Mini-moss, mini-pelia (which looks like it will turn out beautiful ), going to add some petite nana and crypt parva. Probably some stems of HM once I upgrade the light. Have a bunch of floting pennywort to help the tank settle in.

and p.s. I've been around here keeping up on everyone's logs etc. I like the algae growth on your DW. It does the work of moss without you having to buy any of it. Doubt it will spread to the plants, as long as they're growing anyway.


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Post InfoPosted 24-Mar-2006 16:29Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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I am glad to hear that things are getting better with your big tank (as I have to call it now, given that you now have a small one as well).

I am not glad to hear that you are planning to cut back on your chatter here at FP though .


Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 24-Mar-2006 18:19Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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I am not glad to hear that you are planning to cut back on your chatter here at FP though


Dude, I'm not joining the foreign legion or anything like that. I just want to follow through on getting the tank back in order and make sure I know what the heck I'm talking about before getting distracted by further chatter again I'll be in and out. With pics, since I haven't posted any in a few weeks (so much for being the photographer)


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Post InfoPosted 24-Mar-2006 21:15Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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And that's right, I said tanks, plural. I have my little 2.5g desktop tank set up. It features a large piece of DW, and I've got some slow growers in there


I guess we are both holdouts . Sounds nice, I'm looking forward to seeing it. I hope the extra no3 does the trick for your 46g. We need some fresh pics, I'm sure people are getting tired of mine.



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Post InfoPosted 25-Mar-2006 04:59Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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OK, did a bunch of cleanup and removed half a shoebox full of tenellus and clipped the bottoms off the HM because it had become so think they weren't really getting enough light. Replanted, rearranged, new wood etc etc. Right now it looks a little empty, but I think once it fills in it'll be nicer than what it was.

First here's a pic of the worst algae in my tank, the looong green thread stuff:



Lovely, eh?

Now a comparison shot - first what it was, now what it is:





There are a few areas of the tank that are still giving me trouble though... Particularly the empty middle section. I was thinking perhaps another kind of tall plant, or some anubias... or both And I think I'm going to break that little hook piece off that tall piece of DW, unless anyon ehas any othe rideas of how it could work I also have a vision of a little HC carpet in front of the HM

Anyway, that's my update for now. Hopefully it's a nice little break from the usual pictures of LF and tetras gorgeous tanks


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Post InfoPosted 28-Mar-2006 14:28Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
LITTLE_FISH
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Hopefully it's a nice little break from the usual pictures of LF and tetras gorgeous tanks
You know, I wouldn't call this tank shabby either. I like the way it looks now, nice and green. Isn't Pearl Grass one of the easiest plants to replant and to scape? I think so.

I also note that you getting into Wisteria Heaven here . You are for sure looking at way too many pictures from tetratech .

And I think I'm going to break that little hook piece off that tall piece of DW
Why? Do you think it looks ugly? I like the fact that it is not just a plain old stick. If you plan to keep it in the open then maybe adding some moss onto it could be nice.

And HC for the front might work well too, although I have to say that I like the "beachfront" (tetratech term), so keeping it open may work as well.

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 28-Mar-2006 15:09Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
tetratech
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Wow, that's some healthy looking algae. If you could grow it on a rock it would look kinda nice. . Is the that algae growing mostly on the glass and other objects because the plants look good from what I could see.

That first pic you looked like you were pretty much there with maybe alittle fine-tuning.

The second pic as you mentioned the dead middle has broken the triangle. Do you not want a triangle? Oh I just noticed it's all wisteria on the right. Did that plant in the first pic (bacopa?) get consumed by algae?

From what I see, get the right as tall as possible. That new piece of dw looks like it should be pointed more toward the front of the tank and have the plants pass thru it half the way up as they go down the triangle. That's too bad about the tenellus that looked really nice.




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Post InfoPosted 28-Mar-2006 15:37Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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I know it certainly is different, but you must udnerstand, much of the tank had bits of dead and living algae throughout, and it was necessary to uproot a lot and remove a lot of plants. That's what happened with the tenellus. You can't really see it in the first pic, but many of the leaves had BBA growing on them and excel treatment wasn't quite working. It was also so dense that I couldn't vac under there, so there was a lot of organic buildup for whatever reason. I'm trying to keep the bottom as clean as possible to improve WQ.

Now, the wisteria on the right is temporary, it's there right now because it's a great filler and great nutrient sucker. It's there until the algae break-out fully subsides, which it appears to be doing as the green thread stuff has shown no signs of coming back. (the rgeen thread stuff, by the way, only grew on the glass. th eonly stuff on the plants was this brown dirty looking stuff that looked suspiciously like diatoms. ) The bacopa sadly would not recover from the algae outbreak, it was sonsumed, and i think I clipped the tops off too many times, the bottom stems just didn't grow out. Add bacopa to the list of plants where you have to replant the tops every time

As for overall shape, I'm not sure if I want the triangle. I don't know what i want, but I'm not sure why there needs to be a defined shape, for example, it seems like I only have a few options: triangle shape, bell curve, or concave. I guess i just want something more random and less defined at the edges, but more defined within the 'scape itself, with room to get a little overgrown. Is that too much to ask?!?! That's what I'm going to experiment with anyway. Right now the plans are to eventually move some of the wisteria out of the right, and move the rotala group further to the right, adding another large stem plant grouping to either the middle or the right. I'd also like to add a few mid-level plants around the big DW on the right, like crypts, and maybe a tropica sword or two, something small. i didn't have success in the past with the tropica swords but that was because of my fert regimen.


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Post InfoPosted 28-Mar-2006 17:20Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
Wingsdlc
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Nowher,

I like the set up of the new tank better. Let things grow in and play arouhd with shapes and I think you will be happy.

What kind of filter are you running?

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Post InfoPosted 28-Mar-2006 17:38Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Thanks Wings,

It's an Eheim ECCO some-number I forget, I think it's the biggest one


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Post InfoPosted 28-Mar-2006 17:44Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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I see... thanks I have the same problem with the bright green hose. I am running a Odyssea aka new jebo on my tank. It really moves some water around compared to the HOB job.

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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 00:28Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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I don't mind the hose being in view nearly as much as others here might , the only problem I have with it is that hair algae infected it very badly.

I hear ya on the filter though. After hooking up the eheim my water flow was actually pretty minimal until I hooked up the spraybar. Woosh! That got things going


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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 00:31Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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Why did the Rotala change color and become so green ?

I take it you've upped NO3 - what about micros ?


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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 03:53Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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I am not running a spray bar on mine. Just having it come out at a right angle. Kind of makes a river system. If I do the spary bar I would have to find a way to hide it better than just having the 90 degree bar hanging there. Bensaf green is not quite might idea of a good time with a black background.

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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 03:59Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Yes, the unfortunate side effect of the upped NO3 has been the green rotala. I upped N to this level because I'm trying to get the plants going the best I can. I've been dosing micros as per the bottled instructions. Because the algae outbreak I've been having is a thread/ hair algae problem - see the pic above - I'm afraid to add extra iron. In addition to the extra N I've also been adding extra P. This has made the wisteria take-off pretty well, and since that's the outcompete the algae plant I'm looking to get going the most, I guess I'll keep this up... unless you suggest another course of action?

Wings - my spraybar runs flat across the top of the tank, paralell to the side, so it flows out across the top of the tank


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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 04:19Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
Wingsdlc
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I guess I could probaby get mine up that high but I woud have to do some chopping of the pipes.

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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 04:45Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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See here for new tank development - http://www.fishprofiles.com/files/threads/28093.1.htm?0.5325311#

Hint: it has to do with these:






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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 16:38Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
LITTLE_FISH
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Nice NowherMan6

I guess if you want to find out for sure then you will have to take a dive into your tank as well (in case you don't know what I mean, read my log again ).

Great news,

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 18:31Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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No, I read your log, LF, I know exactly what you mean Funny that it happened at roughly the same time, though. Maybe it's something in the Jersey water, or a barametric pressure change in the area, or maybe they just know spring is in the air.

Either way, I think we both need a miniature version of ALVIN (ya know, that deep sea submersible they used to find Titanic ) to confirm.


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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 18:54Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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NowherMan6,



Yup, a mini sub - that is what we need, with lights of course. I checked some toy periscopes that we have at our company (give-aways) but they didn't turn out any good for the task at hand. I guess I at least will have to wait and see if anything will wiggle somewhere at some point.

Are you stocking up on baby food then very soon (just in case)?

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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 19:06Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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EditedEdited by tetratech
I think we both need a miniature version of ALVIN

No you don't, you need the Fishgeek:



Attached Image:


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Post InfoPosted 29-Mar-2006 19:07Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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OK, I'm looking for advice on how to proceed now.

As you know the tank is still suffering from algae problems. IN LFs log it was suggested that large amounts of turnover and redo's of the tank can lead to mulm and ammonia being stirred up into the water column, allowing different types of algae to appear.

My dilemma is this: many of my plants are affected with the brown algae described in another thread, mostly at the bottom of the stem. I'd like to go through and snip the bottoms off tonight and replant the healthy parts. Before replanting I plan on sucking up any mulm that gets churned up when the stems are pulled out.

In LFs thread, however, bensaf and tetra suggested doing work like this only a little bit at a time.

So my question is, is it better to do it as I originally planned it, or to do one plant group at a time per week?


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Post InfoPosted 03-Apr-2006 21:30Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
LITTLE_FISH
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NowherMan6,

I thought I replied to your question above yesterday evening, but then we had a power failure and the modem went out

Anyway, what I said was that I am for sure not the right person to ask as I have the same problem. But as you can see from my tank, overhauls don't seem to help. As such, try the slow approach, trim off heavily affected leaves, add more weeds (aka Wisteria <- bracing for impact from tetratech) and see if this helps. If it does help then let me know so I can approach it the same way . No, actually this is what I am going to do this week (or weekend) anyway.

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 04-Apr-2006 17:37Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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D'oh! That response came one day too late. I already did the overhaul.

But here's the thing. I don't know what it is about my tank or the way I take care of it, but there was so much crap, organic gunk and who knows what under the wisteria pile that I finally understood why the algae was happening. Holy cow, I can't believe I got those gourami to breed under those conditions!

What I did was, I removed one plant group at a time, and when I removed that group I did a gravel vac of the area. So it worked out to three different gravel vacs, one for the wisteria, one for the rotala and one for the HM. Leaf litter under all of them.

I had to do a hack job on the wisteria though. You could tell the healthy parts and the unhealthy parts. Most of the main stems were covered in algae so I took them all off and saved the healthy parts. I meant to take a comparison shot of the old leaves and the new leaves, the old ones being an ugly dark green, the new healthy being a nice bright green.

All in all I took a lot of stuff out of that tank, both old algae covered stems and gunk from the bottom. I'm goign to continue with another WC some time this week to make sure I got as much gunk up as possible, then I'll get back to the once a week routine. The plants do look nice and clean though. And I also cleaned the diffuser. It's vitally important to keep that disc clean. if it clogs up you get bigger bubbles and less CO2 saturation. All clean it comes out in a fine mist, most bubbles don't even make it to the surface.

So I'm pretty happy with this, it gave me a chance to do a good amount of house keeping, hopefully I can maintain this. I plan on adding more weeds ASAP, maybe more wisteria, maybe some hygro or hornwort. My HC is coming in the next day or so, so that should be exciting to plant as well. We'll see how this goes in a few days.


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Post InfoPosted 04-Apr-2006 17:58Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
LITTLE_FISH
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Sorry about that NowherMan6

Now on to this:
hygro or hornwort
What hygro other than Wisteria? And I personally "hate" hornwort. To me it is the most ugly plant I ever had, and really messy on top of it. Wherever it was shaded it would simply disintegrate and leave a big mess of needles everywhere.

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Post InfoPosted 04-Apr-2006 18:25Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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What hygro other than Wisteria


I forgot, wisteria is hygro difformis. I was refering to the weed of all weeds, hygro polysperma, even though I tossed a big batch of it a few months ago, it has great value as a nutrient sucker.

I have a love hate relationship with hornwort. I don't really care for the look of it either, just what it can do. I wouldn't place it in the aquascape, just let it float... but i find that it becomes a breeding gorund for green algae when it floats. I certainly share your dislike of its look though.



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Post InfoPosted 04-Apr-2006 19:38Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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just let it float...
I thought that this is what you would do with it, but even that, IMHO, creates a problem: shading of other plants. If the hornwort would continously cirle on the surface then this would not be an issue, but often the surface current pushes floaters in a particular spot and that this where the plant spends its day, shading all plants below it.

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Post InfoPosted 04-Apr-2006 19:48Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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It's not even just that. I've found that certain plants don't really do too well when left floating.

Pennywort, which I have as a floater now, does well because once at the surface the leaves adapt to surface life. They become a little thicker and more waxy, like a marsh plant.

Hornwort, on the other hand, just sits there and does not adapt. I've found that it collected a lot of junk in its branches. Plus you also raised an interesting point about its brittleness - with the new spraybar I have creating more current I'm sure the needles would break off easily in the current creating more mess.

Thanks LF for reminding me how much I dislike that plant!

I will think about other plants though.


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Post InfoPosted 04-Apr-2006 20:13Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
LITTLE_FISH
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NowherMan6,

How about a trip to AF in two weeks? In case you don't know what I am talking about, Here is the thread that mentions a planted tank discussion.

I signed up over the phone yesterday

I don't think we would get tetratech to come though, he is too scared to venture into Jersey .

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Post InfoPosted 06-Apr-2006 11:39Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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As for hygro's Maybe try some Sunset. It can be pretty pink!

55G Planted tank thread
19G Container Pond
[IMG]http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y118/Wingsdlc/Ric
Post InfoPosted 06-Apr-2006 13:26Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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I saw the thread about the meeting but unfortunetely I can't make it that night, have previous plans. Sounds like it could be cool though, nice to see that there are other people in the area that are into the planted scene.

Wings, I don't think hygro polysperma is available anymore. Last I heard it's classified as a federal noxious weed.

I'm currently looking into some other plants, maybe crypt balansae and some more stem plants to work with.


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Post InfoPosted 06-Apr-2006 15:39Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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Wings, I don't think hygro polysperma is available anymore. Last I heard it's classified as a federal noxious weed.


Hmm... Well I have quite a bit of it. We probably shouldn't talk about how much my store has right now... How do you find out whats ok and not ok?

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Post InfoPosted 07-Apr-2006 03:00Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
LITTLE_FISH
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NowherMan6,

Yeah, the fact that a plant is classified as a federal noxious weed doesn't seem to stop its distribution. Just look at Cabomba, same deal. Tetratech may know more about this particular "weed" as I have read that various water ways in Long Island have been heavily infested with it.

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Post InfoPosted 07-Apr-2006 10:44Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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My wife to be's mom was asking me all sorts of questions if I was part of that problem a while ago....

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[IMG]http://i4.photobucket.com/albums/y118/Wingsdlc/Ric
Post InfoPosted 07-Apr-2006 14:50Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Well, in some cases I think it does, at least with hygro. AZgardens.com and now aquariumplants.com have stopped selling it. (speaking of aquariumplants.com, have you seen the new website? snazzy)


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Post InfoPosted 07-Apr-2006 15:32Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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The pic below shows a lake near my house. See how thick the water looks. It's completely choked with Cabomba

Attached Image:


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Post InfoPosted 07-Apr-2006 16:58Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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Thanks tetratech for the picture

You could make a fortune selling this stuff from that lake illegally, although I am not recommending at all that you do that.

And yes, I have seen the new site of aquariumplants.com, and in fact I have ordered from them twice since the new site is up. There are still some areas that they have blank right now, but I am sure they will fill them in when they have the time to do so (hey, just like FP).

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 07-Apr-2006 18:07Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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EPILOGUE:

It has been a few months since my last post in this log, and, since it went on pretty long and in terms of developing my aquascaping and knowledge of planted tanks was an undoubted success, I thought this log deserved a formal wrap up.

My last ditch attempt to save and redo the tank failed. I couldn't beat back the algae, and most importantly, the disease that was sweeping through my tank earlier continued to kill off most my livestock. When I saw the remaining fish were infected, and knowing I couldn't stop whatever it was, I put them down. Very hard, that was, but to me it was the humane thing to do.

So lately I've just been tearing down the tank. Now, where once stood a developing world of my own creation, there is just an empty tank in need of a cleaning. No longer is it a vibrant piece of living art, just an empty space.

Now it's just time to move forward. I plan on removing the DW and just throwing it out. I could clean and scrub it, but I wouldn't feel right about selling it to someone else in case whatever disease was in the tank still remains inside the wood somewhere. The tank will get a good hard cleaning - bleach it out and get in every crevice. I plan on selling it locally once I feel it's ready. I feel I can sufficiently clean and disinfect it so that it can safely be used by someone else - however, if anyone out there feels it'd be better to just not sell it then please let me know, I'd like to know all opinions on this. I'll sell off the stand and the light hood.

However, I will keep the CO2 set-up and the cannister filter because I will be using them again some time in the near future. Large-ish planted tanks are not out of my future, I know that for sure. I just need to properly plan and think etc and learn from my past mistakes and successes. That's the best I can do, I think.

And so, I thank all of you for your contributions over the past year. LF, tetra, bensaf and others have taught me a lot. It's been tons of fun, and I'll see you on the boards

- Rich


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Post InfoPosted 27-Jun-2006 04:04Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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EditedEdited by LITTLE_FISH
Rich,

What a sad epilogue

I knew somewhat that your tank wasn't doing too well, but I didn't know that it was so bad, with regards to algae and in particular the fish killing illness. I can deal with algae, but when one fish after the other succumbs to an illness, that eats me up. So sorry for you.

Being a man of caution, I would throw out the wood. Others may recomment to boil it, which may be fine, but that is not my style. Disinfecting the tank and other equipment will work well though, IMHO.

And I find it a good idea that you keep the CO2 unit, an expensive piece of equipment that will remind you that you have to put it to use in a bigger and better tank in the very near future .

Now, don't you dare to dissapear into the nirwana of becoming a lurking reader of our logs, your input is not only a pleasure of communication but your knowledge and experience are valuable assets that I would hate to see lost. More than once has your opinion swayed me into a particular direction (may I say driftwood from EBay).

Last but not least, planning and setting up a new tank is a very exciting task, keep on working on it

Have fun,

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 27-Jun-2006 10:11Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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Nowher,
Sorry to hear about taking your tank down and the loss of your fish. There are some fish in my tank I am going to cry the day they go because I have had them for about 5 years now.

Best wishes with the new set up soon to come. Keep us updated!

55G Planted tank thread
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Post InfoPosted 27-Jun-2006 13:55Profile AIM PM Edit Delete Report 
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It's that @#$% Jersey water.

Nowher,

It wasn't too long ago that I had a tank literally blow-up after turning it into the latest L.I. Brewery. I lost about half my fish, including my favorite Snowball Pleco. That tank also had it's share of problems with a slimy coating that seemed to get on all my plants. I learned alot from that experience with the help of Bensaf, LF and you as well.

Sometimes things just happen and are beyond your control, bad piece of DW, corrupted eco-complete, diseased fish.
Even Amano talks about all the fish he killed along the way as he learned about the hobby.

This country is run by a cowboy, so get back on your horse.


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Post InfoPosted 27-Jun-2006 16:05Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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Thanks for the kind words everyone. I've been keeping up with all of your logs and have found them inspiring, but when I ceased to be inspired by my own that's when I knew it was time to tear it down and start over again later.

I guess it's a case of the "46 bowfront curse" striking again. My next move I guess will be to clean everything out and sell it off, and then start planning another tank. I won some money while in AC two weeks ago (kids, don't gamble .... and don't drink ... and certainly don't do both at once ) so I may get a price quote on a custom type tank, or maybe go for an ADG type set-up, something smaller and rimless, we'll see.

And Wings, I hear ya on the fish part. The hardest ones for me were the loaches, they had more personality than any other fish in there. For a while the deaths stopped, then would come again, then stop again etc. This last wave is when I put them down.

Thanks again for th esupport all


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Post InfoPosted 27-Jun-2006 19:53Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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or maybe go for an ADG type set-up

Now that is pure evil

First making us all sad, and then telling us you go all out and get a super tank. You go, Man

Ingo


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Post InfoPosted 27-Jun-2006 20:40Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
NowherMan6
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The camera does not make the photo, nor does the tank make the aquascape. Just tools my friend, that's all they are.




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Post InfoPosted 28-Jun-2006 05:23Profile PM Edit Delete Report 
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The camera does not make the photo, nor does the tank make the aquascape
Well Rich, not really

If it wouldn't be for you then I probably would make mostly mediocre pictures. Not because I learned so much about how to make pictures from you, but because you recommended the right lense.

And with regrads to the tank: I immediately noticed the silicone borders after I redid the 20G and wished for an ADA tank. It would have made a big difference.

Ingo


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