alang
Sun Nov 09, 2008, 02:20 AM
When I was a teen, I had a friend who's dad had Discus. I loved them, and vowed to have some of my own one day. While I did have many tanks over time, I never had discus.
Fast forward almost 30 years. Last year, I got my daughter an aquarium. It had been almost 15 years since my last tank, and it sparked my interest again. While researching fish breeds, I rediscovered discus, and the desire was reawakened.
After several books and many hours on the net, I came to the conclusion (right or wrong) that Discus were happier in a planted tank. I also learned that a stable environment was also key. My first step was to figure out how to maintain a stable planted tank.
Last Janurary I setup a 65g tank and have spent many hours on the net and elbow deep in my tank learning how to keep a stable, heavily planted tank. While no expert, its reached the point where I am comfortable with it and its very stable.
Having accomplished my first goal, I have restarted my research on discus. As with most things the more question that are anwsered, the more present themselves.
So this is my first round of "newbie" questions. I have spend many hours on this and other sites, but still have a few things that need clairification.
1) Aging water. I do 50% WC per week, but have never aged water. What is the purpose of using aged water? I use a chemical de-clorinator, and the water I add is pretty close in temp to that of the tank water.
2) Feeding schedule. I have seen people mentioning feeding 3-4 times a day. I work, so this isn't possible. Is this just for very young fry? At what age/size can you get away with feeding once or maybe twice a day?
3) Do discus care about current? I have two pretty large canister filters (way more than I need for my current situation). These generate a pretty good current that I have pointed longways down the tank. My current fish love it. Will discus?
4) Do discus like to swim in/through plants? I have both wide leaf and stems now. Would it be better to have less open water that will give the fish stuff to swim through, or have a tank with more open swimming area?
I continue to mine lots of info off this site. Thanks to everyone who has comtributed.
Fast forward almost 30 years. Last year, I got my daughter an aquarium. It had been almost 15 years since my last tank, and it sparked my interest again. While researching fish breeds, I rediscovered discus, and the desire was reawakened.
After several books and many hours on the net, I came to the conclusion (right or wrong) that Discus were happier in a planted tank. I also learned that a stable environment was also key. My first step was to figure out how to maintain a stable planted tank.
Last Janurary I setup a 65g tank and have spent many hours on the net and elbow deep in my tank learning how to keep a stable, heavily planted tank. While no expert, its reached the point where I am comfortable with it and its very stable.
Having accomplished my first goal, I have restarted my research on discus. As with most things the more question that are anwsered, the more present themselves.
So this is my first round of "newbie" questions. I have spend many hours on this and other sites, but still have a few things that need clairification.
1) Aging water. I do 50% WC per week, but have never aged water. What is the purpose of using aged water? I use a chemical de-clorinator, and the water I add is pretty close in temp to that of the tank water.
2) Feeding schedule. I have seen people mentioning feeding 3-4 times a day. I work, so this isn't possible. Is this just for very young fry? At what age/size can you get away with feeding once or maybe twice a day?
3) Do discus care about current? I have two pretty large canister filters (way more than I need for my current situation). These generate a pretty good current that I have pointed longways down the tank. My current fish love it. Will discus?
4) Do discus like to swim in/through plants? I have both wide leaf and stems now. Would it be better to have less open water that will give the fish stuff to swim through, or have a tank with more open swimming area?
I continue to mine lots of info off this site. Thanks to everyone who has comtributed.