I've been putting this off for a long time since other things had to take priority, and my hobby had to be backburnered for too long... I already went from five tanks to two, and they went for a long time with only basic maintenance/daily feeding, so lost a lot of live plants, and haven't dedicated any time to breeding, restocking, or new tank plans. I also know that anything I set up now will only be up for a year or two most likely, then will at least need to take apart and move, while I work on DIY renovating this house, and work on longer term plans.
But, I need the focus that getting lost in tank care gives me, and perhaps some purpose to it beyond just making my current tanks pretty again. I always gain from things learned and shared here! You guys are the greatest. So since I'm not even sure which area I want to focus on (and still a bit brain fogged with infection/fever, please bear with me!)
Currently only have my 60L pygmy cory/otocinclus tank up and running, and the ancient 57g tank I inherited from dad - I absolutely intend to keep the pygmy colony since they're still breeding and thriving well, and I can collect enough rainwater to keep that size tank soft enough for them and the otos.
Have a long-term hobbyist dream to successfully breed otos myself, but especially since I'm in a hardwater area and my current group are a mix of at least three subspecies, that's for either after moving to an area with softwater from the tap, or at least, backburnered until I can collect rainwater in larger amounts and get a new batch of otocinclus fresh from import, so begin with a larger group of hopefully the same sub-species. The best store in my city currently has "otos" at six for £25, I'd want to begin with at least 12 so that would work, and likely to at least by the same sub-species, and I don't mind which sub-species honestly, they're all great! The odds are just better if I can begin with a larger group of the same, and not the mixed species I wound up with when I first joined the hobby, and had even less clue about what I'm doing!
The 57g tank will have to go eventually, only fish that I absolutely won't part with are my two female L181s (might add a male, or a group of juveniles to raise to try breeding them later, but that's way down the line, and depends on too many other factors right now), I'm flexible about other stocking once I move those plecs to a new set up, I'm just attached to these particular fish, so not wanting to swap one of them for a male just yet! But I know the man who breed them among others on FB, so that's a future possibility).
Current empty tanks:
240L roma
200L roma
roughly 22g (US) tank that's slightly taller rather than longer, used to be my QT
12.5g
15L (I got for aquascaping/shrimp, haven't used yet, but could be handy for tiny fry too)
The cabinet I reinforced fits the footprint for the 240 Roma perfectly - and given that the GH from the tap here is 253ppm, I would need to stick to hard water area fish if I set up this one just yet.
However, while I need to do some measuring up to double check, I *think* the area I almost have ready for tanks could easily house the 200L and the 22g. These two would give me some more options about what I can keep, what I can attempt to spawn and rear, and get my hand back in with spawning and raising fry, and even better, ones where making sure water hardness isn't a problem.
I traded some juvenile pygmy cories for some P.luminatus before, but was only able to get three adults, then didn't have the time to dedicate to spawning and rearing them, but would have much more time now... I also really like a lot of the other dwarf rainbowfish, have only ever bred livebearers, pgymies, and bronze cories before (and those, accidentally!) so it feels as though keeping dwarf rainbowfish in a community, planted tank (thinking the 200L), and then using the smaller tanks to spawn and raise them might be the way to go?
There's also a group meeting/sale at the end of the month in my city, so plan to attend that and at least get some replacement live plants, and try to resist the urge to impulse buy any fish. But also a chance for m to offload the last of the rescue guppies that are pretty, and I enjoy, but aren't a challenge, and hog potential breeding tank space!
But, I need the focus that getting lost in tank care gives me, and perhaps some purpose to it beyond just making my current tanks pretty again. I always gain from things learned and shared here! You guys are the greatest. So since I'm not even sure which area I want to focus on (and still a bit brain fogged with infection/fever, please bear with me!)
Currently only have my 60L pygmy cory/otocinclus tank up and running, and the ancient 57g tank I inherited from dad - I absolutely intend to keep the pygmy colony since they're still breeding and thriving well, and I can collect enough rainwater to keep that size tank soft enough for them and the otos.
Have a long-term hobbyist dream to successfully breed otos myself, but especially since I'm in a hardwater area and my current group are a mix of at least three subspecies, that's for either after moving to an area with softwater from the tap, or at least, backburnered until I can collect rainwater in larger amounts and get a new batch of otocinclus fresh from import, so begin with a larger group of hopefully the same sub-species. The best store in my city currently has "otos" at six for £25, I'd want to begin with at least 12 so that would work, and likely to at least by the same sub-species, and I don't mind which sub-species honestly, they're all great! The odds are just better if I can begin with a larger group of the same, and not the mixed species I wound up with when I first joined the hobby, and had even less clue about what I'm doing!
The 57g tank will have to go eventually, only fish that I absolutely won't part with are my two female L181s (might add a male, or a group of juveniles to raise to try breeding them later, but that's way down the line, and depends on too many other factors right now), I'm flexible about other stocking once I move those plecs to a new set up, I'm just attached to these particular fish, so not wanting to swap one of them for a male just yet! But I know the man who breed them among others on FB, so that's a future possibility).
Current empty tanks:
240L roma
200L roma
roughly 22g (US) tank that's slightly taller rather than longer, used to be my QT
12.5g
15L (I got for aquascaping/shrimp, haven't used yet, but could be handy for tiny fry too)
The cabinet I reinforced fits the footprint for the 240 Roma perfectly - and given that the GH from the tap here is 253ppm, I would need to stick to hard water area fish if I set up this one just yet.
However, while I need to do some measuring up to double check, I *think* the area I almost have ready for tanks could easily house the 200L and the 22g. These two would give me some more options about what I can keep, what I can attempt to spawn and rear, and get my hand back in with spawning and raising fry, and even better, ones where making sure water hardness isn't a problem.
I traded some juvenile pygmy cories for some P.luminatus before, but was only able to get three adults, then didn't have the time to dedicate to spawning and rearing them, but would have much more time now... I also really like a lot of the other dwarf rainbowfish, have only ever bred livebearers, pgymies, and bronze cories before (and those, accidentally!) so it feels as though keeping dwarf rainbowfish in a community, planted tank (thinking the 200L), and then using the smaller tanks to spawn and raise them might be the way to go?
There's also a group meeting/sale at the end of the month in my city, so plan to attend that and at least get some replacement live plants, and try to resist the urge to impulse buy any fish. But also a chance for m to offload the last of the rescue guppies that are pretty, and I enjoy, but aren't a challenge, and hog potential breeding tank space!
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