mdj131
Wed Jan 18, 2012, 07:00 PM
I just got a decent sized aquarium for a song and I figured I would post my plans here and hopefully learn something in the feedback!
I am no expert, no way no how, but I have been running aquariums from 5 gallons to 55 gallons for about 25 years now, for the last 10 or so focusing on planted tanks except for a brief stint breeding guppies. I figured this would be a great place to air out my ideas for the new tank before they are set in stone so to speak, let some real pro's who know more than I do share their wisdom so the fish I end up getting will be healthier and happier.
The glass is 4'L x 21"T x 18"W, I expect the water column to be about 18-19 inches after soil is in. I was told it is a 100 gallon tank, I am too lazy to do the math.
Substrate: First time using vermiculite soaked in Blood Meal, a high nitrogen, zero ammonia zero phosphate fertilizer. I am hoping the Blood meal wont discolor the water. It will be under sand, about 50% of which I will be removing from the eco-complete in a seasoned 55 this tank will replace. The sand only, no gravel, will be 2-3 inches deep, the vermiculite mixture under it less than 1 inch. Almost forgot, I added about 4 handfuls of Canadian sphagnum peat moss (couldn't find bog peat around here) to the vermiculite. I doubt I will ever have to add black-water extract because this has worked well for me in other aquariums keeping the tannins a nice natural black-water color all the time, for years at a time. My 55 gallon has a vermiculite /peat/sand mixture and the plants have done well for years, so I am hoping the addition of Blood meal will improve on whats been working for me. Seems like Blood Meal would be high in iron, right? It is very high in organic nitrogen. Is it possible too much iron/nitrogen could leech from under the sand and hurt the fish?
There will be a medium amount of driftwood arranged as a center-piece, also seasoned for years. Due to the sinfully soft water here I add natural mussel shells here and there, doubt it helps much but every little bit counts. I know discus like soft water but ours is extreme.
Chemistry... as noted the water here is super soft. I also will have to deal with the insanely high ph. After 3 days in a plastic tub, water here measures 8.0. I intend to let the discus adjust to the water rather than trying to "fix" this issue. Water changes are done with water that has has 3 days of airing out.
Ammonia will be at zero, nitrites and nitrates well under control. I will be using canister filters, 1 of which is fully seasoned and I will be using 50 gallons of seasoned water from the old tank as well.
I expect the new tank to have a very short, if any, breaking in period, since all but 50% of the water and sand will be from an established 10 year old tank. Due to the high ph here, I intend to buy young discus and let them adapt, will this be helpful?
Plants: Medium to almost Heavy density. I have an assortment of plants doing well now in the old tank and more on the way... I hope the old plants do well when I move them, they should as they have been moved before and survived, even thrived. I use a store bought DIY type co2 system where the yeast sends bubbles up a cool ladder.... not exact but it gets the job done. I have 5 x 4' long fluorescent tubes @ 40 watts each, in a spectrum my plants are loving. Every 6-9 months I give away a 5 gallon bucket of trimmings to a friend with turtles in a pond.
Fish:
I recently decided NOT to put my dwarf Pleco's in due to concerns they might attack the discus. I have 2 Siamese Algae eaters who do a wonderful job with any hair algae that pops up, a large colony of Malaysian Trumpet Snails to do cleanup and aerate the sand, and I have about 30 Neons. I would prefer Cardinal Tetras but I find them too expensive/hard to find, plus they are are slightly bigger bio-load.
I intend to buy 2 pair of German Blue Rams, (right amount for tank? )and an undetermined number of Discus, strain undecided as of yet. Help me decide how many to get :) I want them happy and full grown, even if it means I can only get one.
I don't buy into the 10% water change every week theory. I change 90% every 2 months and my fish haven't been diseased in years. (darned guppies lol) I guess the plants growing so fast helps. One of them is a fast growing floating moss that I have to scoop out 20% of weekly to keep it small. Nitrates don't get bad enough to have any noticeable effect... right before a water change it measures around 20 ppm Is this too high for Discus? I am guessing my water change habits will have to change with the larger tank and more sensitive fish so your thoughts are welcome.
So, now you know most of what I am planning to do and with what equipment. Any suggestions or ideas?
I have some questions too... will 2 pair of Rams co-exist in this tank? I'm thinking yes but not sure.
How many Discus will grow to full size in this system, considering the water column, other fish, and plants?
Where is a good place to buy Rams & Discus online?
Thanks in advance for your time and advice :)
I am no expert, no way no how, but I have been running aquariums from 5 gallons to 55 gallons for about 25 years now, for the last 10 or so focusing on planted tanks except for a brief stint breeding guppies. I figured this would be a great place to air out my ideas for the new tank before they are set in stone so to speak, let some real pro's who know more than I do share their wisdom so the fish I end up getting will be healthier and happier.
The glass is 4'L x 21"T x 18"W, I expect the water column to be about 18-19 inches after soil is in. I was told it is a 100 gallon tank, I am too lazy to do the math.
Substrate: First time using vermiculite soaked in Blood Meal, a high nitrogen, zero ammonia zero phosphate fertilizer. I am hoping the Blood meal wont discolor the water. It will be under sand, about 50% of which I will be removing from the eco-complete in a seasoned 55 this tank will replace. The sand only, no gravel, will be 2-3 inches deep, the vermiculite mixture under it less than 1 inch. Almost forgot, I added about 4 handfuls of Canadian sphagnum peat moss (couldn't find bog peat around here) to the vermiculite. I doubt I will ever have to add black-water extract because this has worked well for me in other aquariums keeping the tannins a nice natural black-water color all the time, for years at a time. My 55 gallon has a vermiculite /peat/sand mixture and the plants have done well for years, so I am hoping the addition of Blood meal will improve on whats been working for me. Seems like Blood Meal would be high in iron, right? It is very high in organic nitrogen. Is it possible too much iron/nitrogen could leech from under the sand and hurt the fish?
There will be a medium amount of driftwood arranged as a center-piece, also seasoned for years. Due to the sinfully soft water here I add natural mussel shells here and there, doubt it helps much but every little bit counts. I know discus like soft water but ours is extreme.
Chemistry... as noted the water here is super soft. I also will have to deal with the insanely high ph. After 3 days in a plastic tub, water here measures 8.0. I intend to let the discus adjust to the water rather than trying to "fix" this issue. Water changes are done with water that has has 3 days of airing out.
Ammonia will be at zero, nitrites and nitrates well under control. I will be using canister filters, 1 of which is fully seasoned and I will be using 50 gallons of seasoned water from the old tank as well.
I expect the new tank to have a very short, if any, breaking in period, since all but 50% of the water and sand will be from an established 10 year old tank. Due to the high ph here, I intend to buy young discus and let them adapt, will this be helpful?
Plants: Medium to almost Heavy density. I have an assortment of plants doing well now in the old tank and more on the way... I hope the old plants do well when I move them, they should as they have been moved before and survived, even thrived. I use a store bought DIY type co2 system where the yeast sends bubbles up a cool ladder.... not exact but it gets the job done. I have 5 x 4' long fluorescent tubes @ 40 watts each, in a spectrum my plants are loving. Every 6-9 months I give away a 5 gallon bucket of trimmings to a friend with turtles in a pond.
Fish:
I recently decided NOT to put my dwarf Pleco's in due to concerns they might attack the discus. I have 2 Siamese Algae eaters who do a wonderful job with any hair algae that pops up, a large colony of Malaysian Trumpet Snails to do cleanup and aerate the sand, and I have about 30 Neons. I would prefer Cardinal Tetras but I find them too expensive/hard to find, plus they are are slightly bigger bio-load.
I intend to buy 2 pair of German Blue Rams, (right amount for tank? )and an undetermined number of Discus, strain undecided as of yet. Help me decide how many to get :) I want them happy and full grown, even if it means I can only get one.
I don't buy into the 10% water change every week theory. I change 90% every 2 months and my fish haven't been diseased in years. (darned guppies lol) I guess the plants growing so fast helps. One of them is a fast growing floating moss that I have to scoop out 20% of weekly to keep it small. Nitrates don't get bad enough to have any noticeable effect... right before a water change it measures around 20 ppm Is this too high for Discus? I am guessing my water change habits will have to change with the larger tank and more sensitive fish so your thoughts are welcome.
So, now you know most of what I am planning to do and with what equipment. Any suggestions or ideas?
I have some questions too... will 2 pair of Rams co-exist in this tank? I'm thinking yes but not sure.
How many Discus will grow to full size in this system, considering the water column, other fish, and plants?
Where is a good place to buy Rams & Discus online?
Thanks in advance for your time and advice :)