Your water is moderately hardI guess you’re right. Problem here is, I have to soft of water. (Which makes no sense. After all, I live in the “limestone capital of the USA” and limestone is very hard.
Your water is moderately hardI guess you’re right. Problem here is, I have to soft of water. (Which makes no sense. After all, I live in the “limestone capital of the USA” and limestone is very hard.
I use around 10 gallon of RO a water change and 10 gallons of treated tap water so it is around 2.90 a week. It is the price I am willing to pay for liking soft water fish.Lol.
Is it really worth 29 cents per gallon? That seems like a lot to me.
I guess I got that mixed around...Your water is moderately hardso you probably have soft water and the limestone hardens it. Dunno
Guppies need hard, yours is moderately hard, so in between. Most Soft water fish will be ok, but it's not hard enough for livebearersI guess I got that mixed around...
Do guppies need hard or soft water? I remember in a thread I was asking about guppies.
You have a very nice pond too.Wow! I have 150G garden pond and I have to change 75% of the water weekly to keep the nitrates down. My patio is covered so plants won’t grow in the pond. I have them around it. I only have 3 large goldfish in it. They’ve been out there going on 3 years. Your pond is nice!
We do have some frost in the winter, and sometimes 80s-90s F in summer. But I have a heater in there that shuts off when it’s warm enough.Love this! Does your location mean the temperature stays the same year round? I live in a subtropical area, and I'm about to embark on a similar project soon.
Are you getting many fry from the mollies?
I'm sorry this happened to you.So I tested the water and was really pleased with the results- high ph, high KH, GH around 250 so that’s good, and ZERO nitrates and nitrites! Yay!
I’ve tested a few times now and it’s stable and healthy.
...Now for the bad news...
Up until now I have been topping up the pond about an inch each week due to evaporation. I squirt some hose water into a plastic bin, let it sit a couple days to dechlorinate, and then pour it in. It’s always been fine. Until-
We got a new garden hose.
the water coming out had a strong smell. I thought it was just the smell of the plastic, not the water, so I did my usual procedure and used the water. Big mistake. In the last week I have lost three female Molly’s. I can only assume it was caused by chemicals in the new hose. I did some research and this is indeed possible. Before this week I hadn’t lost any Molly’s in over 6 months. ery frustrated. We are buying a non PVC hose to replace this toxic garbage.
Meanwhile, I removed all the fry, and a large female who looked a bit off, into my ten gallon planted tank in the house. I’m preparing to catch the rest of the fish tomorrow and move them into a 30 gal tub I’ve set up outside until I can fix this contaminated water situation.
I’m doing research on wether to do a large water change, or wait and let the plants clean the water. If anybody has advice it would be welcome.