Gotta love those Plecos!
Give him time with the wood. Mine took a while to get a liking for it.
Give him time with the wood. Mine took a while to get a liking for it.
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Thank you for taking responsibility for your fish. I have a lot of respect for your dedication to their wellbeing. Upgrading is exactly what I would want to do were I in that situation. I understand that my fish probably don't give a damn about me as anything but a provider of food (and I don't know that all of them make that association). However, we, as aquarists, often develop affection and attachment.Made up my mind, going to try and expand. By my estimations nearly everything already in the tank would benefit from larger quarters (be it sheer size or required numbers per species), and I can't in good conscience just rehome an entire community to replace it with something else when they've already been with me for a number of years.
My aim will be a 125 gallon or so, with proper aquascaping (I'll try "non-rooted" species like java ferns and java moss). I already tried to make the setup at least semi-naturalistic but I want to go further. It won't happen for a while until I can find what I'm looking for and there's still research to be done but hopefully I can navigate this and make the changes I want to see.
Uh, appreciate the post but you'll probably want to read the rest of this thread because things have changed quite a bit since the initial plans. ?Thank you for taking responsibility for your fish. I have a lot of respect for your dedication to their wellbeing. Upgrading is exactly what I would want to do were I in that situation. I understand that my fish probably don't give a damn about me as anything but a provider of food (and I don't know that all of them make that association). However, we, as aquarists, often develop affection and attachment.
If you need help with plants, ask the forum again! A lot of us have experience with planted tanks. I, myself, currently have a large planted community as well as a 6 gallon planted betta tank. I'm just finishing up on cycling another betta tank that will eventually house plants. They do wonders for bioload, aesthetics, and the comfort of the fish. Best of luck!
It's not strange at all to become attached. I recently had to rehome a 5-year old aggressive angel that I've had since he was the size of a quarter. It was a hard day driving him off to his breeder in a glass jar. I wonder how he is, even though I know he went into good hands, it was hard but right. When my nearly 10 year old angle (Copernicus) passed several years ago, I was devastated - it's allowed! Don't feel bad about worrying about them, but at a point, some need to go to other places. They aren't attached to us like we are to them. Be discerning and trust your gut. I wouldn't put a larger tank on a floor that's not on a first level unless it's your own home without attached neighbors - you don't know the ins and outs of the framework, and you don't want any liability. That clown loach is the biggest I've seen - perhaps there's a big restaurant or museum tank that he could go to? He'd likely have routine maintenance and people to admire him. The pleco will also get big. I really can't stand the thought of living without aquaria - if you can, keep it small, but keep it. That likely means giving up the big kids. New and fresh ideas might be really inspiring!I'm having conflicting thoughts... A part of me wants to just rehome fish and "start over" but, the other part wants to try and make things better with what I already have and deal with the challenges as they come. When I was young I had a huge collection of animals (already had several and then others came from friends and then some reproduced and so on) and eventually I rehomed many of them, an act which still haunts me to this day.
I know it's strange to impart such emotional baggage to fish of all things but, considering how long some of them have been with me I don't know how to feel about giving them away after all this time. But t
Hey there, I'm new here and have a predicament to discuss. I've had fish for a number of years now but it's come to my attention that things aren't as up to snuff as they should be and I'm unsure of the best course of action at this point.
Currently have a 55 gallon community, with issues of species that need far bigger space and others that aren't doing so well. The residents are 4 clown loaches, 2 Australian rainbowfish, an albino rainbow shark, 2 upside-down catfish, a giant danio and a pleco of indeterminate species. Nothing special about the setup, just two hang-on-back filters, dual heaters (water stays around 80F), gravel and plastic plants with a fake log hide and one piece of driftwood (gave up trying live plants since the clowns dig out everything before long). Try to water change every couple weeks but I've had a less than stellar track record of maintenance upkeep.
The community itself is over a decade old, and many have already come and gone (used to actually be a smaller species community until the loaches figured out that small fish make excellent snacks), and several that are less keep having issues like on and off fin rot, one of the rainbowfish seems to have swim bladder issues (constantly swimming at a diagonal angle) and the giant danio has some kind of tumor-like growth on its lip. But the biggest problem as you may have guessed is space. I know clown loaches need double the dimensions that they are currently in. In fact I never would've gotten any but when I started out with a 30 gallon off Craigslist it came with one and I've slowly introduced more so it wouldn't be lonely. And the pleco was a blunder as it was supposed to be a bristlenose but it's clearly a species that's going to get giant (it's relatively new so it's small for now).
However, I don't think it's possible to upgrade to the required 100+ gallon setup as within the next few years I'll be moving out on my own and I'm nervous about the prospect of having to fit a tank of that size in an apartment, let alone having to worry about floor structural integrity that one needs to be aware of with that kind of weight. Bottom line is, the setup is kind of a mess that needs serious rethinking. Should I just attempt to rehome the loaches and pleco? Sell the entire thing since I've done a rather mediocre job? Are the other fish savable at this point? Really unsure what I should do.
he prospect of dealing with a setup over double the size I currently have that'd be required to give them their best life is equally daunting, not just in itself (space, cost, maintenance) but the extra dilemmas down the line with moving and such. I'm at a crossroads and I'm left wanting of an answer as to which path to take...