Originally posted by: Homerboy
get fresh water with live plants and some chichlids
love it
Originally posted by: SlickSnake
Originally posted by: Homerboy
get fresh water with live plants and some chichlids
love it
Fresh water African chichlids are also nice fish, but they are very aggressive. I would buy a few small ones, and don't start with the larger ones. Some of them can change their colors dramatically. There are also many interesting plecostomuses that can be added to an African tank.
Originally posted by: Gooberlx2
Originally posted by: SlickSnake
Originally posted by: Homerboy
get fresh water with live plants and some chichlids
love it
Fresh water African chichlids are also nice fish, but they are very aggressive. I would buy a few small ones, and don't start with the larger ones. Some of them can change their colors dramatically. There are also many interesting plecostomuses that can be added to an African tank.
Plecos grow to be much larger than the OPs target tank would allow. I'd buy snails instead.
Originally posted by: Raduque
Originally posted by: Gooberlx2
Originally posted by: SlickSnake
Originally posted by: Homerboy
get fresh water with live plants and some chichlids
love it
Fresh water African chichlids are also nice fish, but they are very aggressive. I would buy a few small ones, and don't start with the larger ones. Some of them can change their colors dramatically. There are also many interesting plecostomuses that can be added to an African tank.
Plecos grow to be much larger than the OPs target tank would allow. I'd buy snails instead.
Indeed. I have a single Chocolate pleco in my 55 and I think he's going to outgrow it in the long run.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: jdoggg12
Ok... so how about this... say you have a roughly 50 gallon tank.. what do you have to do daily, weekly, monthly to keep it healthy?
Honestly?
Time is about 20-30 minutes per day. You can add it all up to make weekly but that is what it takes.
What do you have to do? Weekly here's the low down.
Clean skimmer
Clean walls of tank
Water changes - takes about 30 minutes of work, don't have to do weekly but it helps.
Check levels - need to add calc/alk at least 2/wk.
If you don't keep up on the maintenance, it will bite you. I'm staring at my tank that is taken over by red slime because I didn't keep up on maintenance. And once you are in my hell it is almost impossible to get out.
Originally posted by: AMCRambler
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: jdoggg12
Ok... so how about this... say you have a roughly 50 gallon tank.. what do you have to do daily, weekly, monthly to keep it healthy?
Honestly?
Time is about 20-30 minutes per day. You can add it all up to make weekly but that is what it takes.
What do you have to do? Weekly here's the low down.
Clean skimmer
Clean walls of tank
Water changes - takes about 30 minutes of work, don't have to do weekly but it helps.
Check levels - need to add calc/alk at least 2/wk.
If you don't keep up on the maintenance, it will bite you. I'm staring at my tank that is taken over by red slime because I didn't keep up on maintenance. And once you are in my hell it is almost impossible to get out.
Spidey sounds like you put a lot of work into your tank. I don't think you should be having the issues you are. Is it a fish only tank? Or do you have live rock in there. I had a red algae bloom start in one spot on my rocks and found the cause of it was that I was getting some direct sunlight on the tank when I wasn't home. Algae loves sunlight and will go crazy quite quickly.
The other possibility is the water quality. On the forums I read they are always extolling the virtues of reverse osmosis de-ionized filtered water. I've got town water where I live and found my tap water is pretty darn good. I use a Pur water filter with carbon in it on my tap to help clean it up some more and add some de-chlor to get rid of any chlorine it might have. But even when I don't filter I don't get a huge algae explosion. Just a little bit. You might want to test your water you are using for water changes. But honestly once you've got your water parameters inline, the algae should subside on it's own.
I spend probably about 15 minutes a day feeding the fish and just looking it over to make sure algae isn't getting out of hand and that none of my snails have fallen off the rock and are stuck upside down in the sand(they do this more often lately stupid things). Water changes I used to do weekly but I'm stretching it to bi weekly now and I haven't really noticed any issues. I only have 2 small fish at the moment, so maybe you have a higher bio-load than me? Other than the water changes I usually have to scrape sprial feather dusters and corraline off my front glass pane every one to two weeks. I also turn the lights on and off as I don't have a timer. It's not too bad though and it's been a fun hobby. Maybe if you give us some details we can help you figure out your algae prob.
Originally posted by: AMCRambler
Spidey sounds like you put a lot of work into your tank. I don't think you should be having the issues you are. Is it a fish only tank? Or do you have live rock in there. I had a red algae bloom start in one spot on my rocks and found the cause of it was that I was getting some direct sunlight on the tank when I wasn't home. Algae loves sunlight and will go crazy quite quickly.
The other possibility is the water quality. On the forums I read they are always extolling the virtues of reverse osmosis de-ionized filtered water. I've got town water where I live and found my tap water is pretty darn good. I use a Pur water filter with carbon in it on my tap to help clean it up some more and add some de-chlor to get rid of any chlorine it might have. But even when I don't filter I don't get a huge algae explosion. Just a little bit. You might want to test your water you are using for water changes. But honestly once you've got your water parameters inline, the algae should subside on it's own.
I spend probably about 15 minutes a day feeding the fish and just looking it over to make sure algae isn't getting out of hand and that none of my snails have fallen off the rock and are stuck upside down in the sand(they do this more often lately stupid things). Water changes I used to do weekly but I'm stretching it to bi weekly now and I haven't really noticed any issues. I only have 2 small fish at the moment, so maybe you have a higher bio-load than me? Other than the water changes I usually have to scrape sprial feather dusters and corraline off my front glass pane every one to two weeks. I also turn the lights on and off as I don't have a timer. It's not too bad though and it's been a fun hobby. Maybe if you give us some details we can help you figure out your algae prob.
