Hello all,
This is likely to be a long rambling post with some interspersed questions so my thanks to anyone who bears with me!
I finally talked the husband into letting us keep some fish (he hates seeing any animal 'caged') but I wanted us to have family pets in the house for the sake of our kids and he is allergic to anything with fur so fish are our only option!
I haven't kept fish since I was a little girl, I used to have a small tank of goldfish in my bedroom back in the 80's. We never dechlorinated the water and knew nothing about ammonia or nitrites back then. We just used to do a 100% water change and scrubbed the tank out every week or two, whenever the water started looking mucky. Somehow one of the goldfish managed to survive for 20 years but I don't think it had a very happy life.
This time I'm determined that my fish will be happy. I've tried to research everything thoroughly so that my kids will enjoy seeing happy, active fish swimming in the tank (and so my husband won't feel so guilty every time he looks at them)! I've learned a lot about proper fishkeeping in the last couple of weeks.
I initially assumed that goldfish would be easier to keep as kid's first pets, but after reading up it seems that they need too much space and tropical fish will be happier in the long run. So, I knew nothing about tropical fish and had to do some reading!
When we looked at the tropical fish in the pet store, my kids loved the neon tetras and I adored the harlequins. But after reading about them I realised that neither of those fish would be happy living in our hard tap water. So I did some research to find out which fish enjoy hard water conditions and took another trip to a specialised aquatic store. My kids were somewhat distracted by the tank of giant piranhas but they also liked the orange platies with Mickey Mouse on the tail and I spotted some golden guppies that I thought would go nicely with them.
So, my initial stocking will be four Mickey Mouse platies (1 male, 3 female) followed by six guppies a few weeks later. I'm sort of hoping they might breed and I might end up with a few more fish, although I don't know much about raising fish fry. And... this is a silly question but how do you pronounce platy? Is it platty, play-tee or plah-tee?!
I'd also like a pleco but I don't think there will be space in the tank – unless there is a dwarf variety of pleco?
Needless to say, I am not getting the piranhas. Even if my five year old won't shut up about them.
Okay, so I found some fish we like. I went ahead and bought a 60L Interpet tank and some decorations and filled it up with water (dechlorinated this time!). The filter and heater are running nicely. This is what it looks like right now:
I went for a sand substrate after experimenting with a mix of sand and gravel. The left side is brown aquarium sand and the right side is golden play sand pilfered from my kid's sandpit. I've read that dangerous gasses can become trapped under the sand, so I've tried not to make it too deep and I will have to disturb it periodically.
I think it already looks beautiful, even without any fish I often find myself gazing at it and watching the ripples cast shadows on the sand. I'm really looking forward to getting some fish in there and watching them swim around. First things first, though. I'm bracing myself for the whole thing to become an ugly algae soup when I start fishless cycling!
I got hold of some Bio-mature and I'm just waiting for my API water test kit to arrive before I start adding it (I couldn't find pure ammonia anywhere). I've also got some Filter Start that came with the tank that I hope might speed up the cycling.
I did a strip test on my tap water and these are the readings:
Nitrates 50mg/L
pH 7.8
GH 16 deg
KH 20 deg
Those are the maximum readings for hardness, it could be off the scale for all I know. Seems our tap water really is hard as nails!
I'm a bit concerned about the nitrates present in the tap water. The ambient nitrate level isn't far below the 'water change' mark. I guess this means I will be doing more frequent water changes to keep the nitrates down
unless there is some way of removing nitrates from the tap water before I add it to the tank?
The plants in the tank are just plastic for now to disguise the equipment. I'd like to get some live plants at some point. I've got my eye on hornwort, Beckett's water trumpet and a short variety of Vallisneria, though I know there's not much space in the tank but maybe I can replace the plastic plants someday if my live plants do well. I was going to plant the tank before cycling but my Bio-mature says it shouldn't be used with any fish or plants in the tank.
There are two 15W lights in the hood of the tank, which I'm not convinced is enough to grow anything green, but the tank situated right next to our glass patio doors and gets direct sunlight from mid-morning to midday so maybe it will get enough natural light to help the plants grow. (I'll have to keep an eye on the water temperature in summer).
Having said that, my only experience of live plants are the sorry-looking stems left after my old goldfish had finished devouring them, so I'm not holding out too much hope for a lush plant-scape
I'll also be washing any live plants in an anti-snail treatment before I put them in the tank. I have a tiny pond in the garden outside which is full to the brim with pond snails. I think they're very sweet outside but don't much like the thought of them multiplying in my house!
Okay I guess this was sort of my introduction and setup description. My appreciation to anyone who stuck with me this far! Now I do have one major question, regarding quarantine tanks which have left me a bit confused.
I don't have a lot of space to keep an additional tank and I don't want to leave a filter and heater running all the time if the tank is empty. So how do quarantine tanks work? Do I really need one? Is there any point having a filter in one if it hasn't been cycled?
This is likely to be a long rambling post with some interspersed questions so my thanks to anyone who bears with me!
I finally talked the husband into letting us keep some fish (he hates seeing any animal 'caged') but I wanted us to have family pets in the house for the sake of our kids and he is allergic to anything with fur so fish are our only option!
I haven't kept fish since I was a little girl, I used to have a small tank of goldfish in my bedroom back in the 80's. We never dechlorinated the water and knew nothing about ammonia or nitrites back then. We just used to do a 100% water change and scrubbed the tank out every week or two, whenever the water started looking mucky. Somehow one of the goldfish managed to survive for 20 years but I don't think it had a very happy life.
This time I'm determined that my fish will be happy. I've tried to research everything thoroughly so that my kids will enjoy seeing happy, active fish swimming in the tank (and so my husband won't feel so guilty every time he looks at them)! I've learned a lot about proper fishkeeping in the last couple of weeks.
I initially assumed that goldfish would be easier to keep as kid's first pets, but after reading up it seems that they need too much space and tropical fish will be happier in the long run. So, I knew nothing about tropical fish and had to do some reading!
When we looked at the tropical fish in the pet store, my kids loved the neon tetras and I adored the harlequins. But after reading about them I realised that neither of those fish would be happy living in our hard tap water. So I did some research to find out which fish enjoy hard water conditions and took another trip to a specialised aquatic store. My kids were somewhat distracted by the tank of giant piranhas but they also liked the orange platies with Mickey Mouse on the tail and I spotted some golden guppies that I thought would go nicely with them.
So, my initial stocking will be four Mickey Mouse platies (1 male, 3 female) followed by six guppies a few weeks later. I'm sort of hoping they might breed and I might end up with a few more fish, although I don't know much about raising fish fry. And... this is a silly question but how do you pronounce platy? Is it platty, play-tee or plah-tee?!
I'd also like a pleco but I don't think there will be space in the tank – unless there is a dwarf variety of pleco?
Needless to say, I am not getting the piranhas. Even if my five year old won't shut up about them.
Okay, so I found some fish we like. I went ahead and bought a 60L Interpet tank and some decorations and filled it up with water (dechlorinated this time!). The filter and heater are running nicely. This is what it looks like right now:
I went for a sand substrate after experimenting with a mix of sand and gravel. The left side is brown aquarium sand and the right side is golden play sand pilfered from my kid's sandpit. I've read that dangerous gasses can become trapped under the sand, so I've tried not to make it too deep and I will have to disturb it periodically.
I think it already looks beautiful, even without any fish I often find myself gazing at it and watching the ripples cast shadows on the sand. I'm really looking forward to getting some fish in there and watching them swim around. First things first, though. I'm bracing myself for the whole thing to become an ugly algae soup when I start fishless cycling!
I got hold of some Bio-mature and I'm just waiting for my API water test kit to arrive before I start adding it (I couldn't find pure ammonia anywhere). I've also got some Filter Start that came with the tank that I hope might speed up the cycling.
I did a strip test on my tap water and these are the readings:
Nitrates 50mg/L
pH 7.8
GH 16 deg
KH 20 deg
Those are the maximum readings for hardness, it could be off the scale for all I know. Seems our tap water really is hard as nails!
I'm a bit concerned about the nitrates present in the tap water. The ambient nitrate level isn't far below the 'water change' mark. I guess this means I will be doing more frequent water changes to keep the nitrates down
The plants in the tank are just plastic for now to disguise the equipment. I'd like to get some live plants at some point. I've got my eye on hornwort, Beckett's water trumpet and a short variety of Vallisneria, though I know there's not much space in the tank but maybe I can replace the plastic plants someday if my live plants do well. I was going to plant the tank before cycling but my Bio-mature says it shouldn't be used with any fish or plants in the tank.
There are two 15W lights in the hood of the tank, which I'm not convinced is enough to grow anything green, but the tank situated right next to our glass patio doors and gets direct sunlight from mid-morning to midday so maybe it will get enough natural light to help the plants grow. (I'll have to keep an eye on the water temperature in summer).
Having said that, my only experience of live plants are the sorry-looking stems left after my old goldfish had finished devouring them, so I'm not holding out too much hope for a lush plant-scape
I'll also be washing any live plants in an anti-snail treatment before I put them in the tank. I have a tiny pond in the garden outside which is full to the brim with pond snails. I think they're very sweet outside but don't much like the thought of them multiplying in my house!
Okay I guess this was sort of my introduction and setup description. My appreciation to anyone who stuck with me this far! Now I do have one major question, regarding quarantine tanks which have left me a bit confused.
I don't have a lot of space to keep an additional tank and I don't want to leave a filter and heater running all the time if the tank is empty. So how do quarantine tanks work? Do I really need one? Is there any point having a filter in one if it hasn't been cycled?