Hi,
I'm relatively new to the hobby. I had a few fish here and there when I was growing up, but I was a kid, and wasn't serious about it at the time. Only recently, now that I'm grown up, have I discovered my love for fish keeping.
I currently have a single male Halfmoon Betta named Dart. He used to live in a little 2 gallon tank with a couple of ghost shrimp, and he was happy and well taken care of, but he's been upgraded recently. Now he's in a (almost) fully stocked 30 gallon community tank. I actually have been building this tank up for a betta sorority. I've obsessively researched this and I've built this tank up with plants and rocks and decoration specifically to be a betta sorority. I would say the tank is over-decorated, but for a sorority, that's what you need, so the bettas can establish territories. As for Dart, this 30 gallon is only a temporary home. Before I get the 5 females, I need to put Dart somewhere else. I can't bring myself to put him back in a 2 gallon now that he's experienced a 30 gallon community tank, so I'll probably end up getting a 10 gallon.
But back to what I do have...
Currently in my community tank:
1 male Halfmoon Betta (Dart)
6 Kuhli Loaches
5 Albino Cory Catfish
4 male Guppies
7(ish?) Ghost Shrimp
12 Neon Tetras
According to aquadvisor my tank is at 90%. And I know removing Dart won't free up enough bio-capacity to add 5 female bettas. So something has to give. I'm thinking these 4 male guppies may get moved, too, as they're probably not the best tank mates for a betta sorority. Or, I could move the 5 Albino Corys, and keep them with Dart. Although Dart and the guppies are getting along in the overdecorated 30 gallon now, I'm not convinced they would get along in a smaller tank, because it's almost like Dart and the guppies have territories in the 30 gallon, which is why I'm considering moving the Corys instead. Either way, Dart has to move. I have included a poll at the top of this thread asking what I should remove from the tank along with Dart to make room for the sorority.
Here's a picture of Dart and one of my Corys. If you look for it you might find one of my kuhli's hanging out in the shadows. I know, Dart is looking pretty fat. I've been trying to limit his food intake, but that's hard in a community tank. I have even resorted to putting him in a breeder box during meal time, and waiting at least an hour before letting him back out, but he still manages to find leftover food. He's very smart, and has figured out that if he follows the bottom feeders around, they'll eventually dig up something tasty, and he can steal it from them. So it will be good when I do get another tank and set it up for him, because it will be easier to control his eating habits, at least long enough to make him fast for a day or two.
Anyway, Greetings everyone!
Oh, and by the way, I have a dog, too. Her name is Buffy. She's a 70 lb lab mix with rottie coloring. You wish your dog was as cool as mine.
I'm relatively new to the hobby. I had a few fish here and there when I was growing up, but I was a kid, and wasn't serious about it at the time. Only recently, now that I'm grown up, have I discovered my love for fish keeping.
I currently have a single male Halfmoon Betta named Dart. He used to live in a little 2 gallon tank with a couple of ghost shrimp, and he was happy and well taken care of, but he's been upgraded recently. Now he's in a (almost) fully stocked 30 gallon community tank. I actually have been building this tank up for a betta sorority. I've obsessively researched this and I've built this tank up with plants and rocks and decoration specifically to be a betta sorority. I would say the tank is over-decorated, but for a sorority, that's what you need, so the bettas can establish territories. As for Dart, this 30 gallon is only a temporary home. Before I get the 5 females, I need to put Dart somewhere else. I can't bring myself to put him back in a 2 gallon now that he's experienced a 30 gallon community tank, so I'll probably end up getting a 10 gallon.
But back to what I do have...
Currently in my community tank:
1 male Halfmoon Betta (Dart)
6 Kuhli Loaches
5 Albino Cory Catfish
4 male Guppies
7(ish?) Ghost Shrimp
12 Neon Tetras
According to aquadvisor my tank is at 90%. And I know removing Dart won't free up enough bio-capacity to add 5 female bettas. So something has to give. I'm thinking these 4 male guppies may get moved, too, as they're probably not the best tank mates for a betta sorority. Or, I could move the 5 Albino Corys, and keep them with Dart. Although Dart and the guppies are getting along in the overdecorated 30 gallon now, I'm not convinced they would get along in a smaller tank, because it's almost like Dart and the guppies have territories in the 30 gallon, which is why I'm considering moving the Corys instead. Either way, Dart has to move. I have included a poll at the top of this thread asking what I should remove from the tank along with Dart to make room for the sorority.
Here's a picture of Dart and one of my Corys. If you look for it you might find one of my kuhli's hanging out in the shadows. I know, Dart is looking pretty fat. I've been trying to limit his food intake, but that's hard in a community tank. I have even resorted to putting him in a breeder box during meal time, and waiting at least an hour before letting him back out, but he still manages to find leftover food. He's very smart, and has figured out that if he follows the bottom feeders around, they'll eventually dig up something tasty, and he can steal it from them. So it will be good when I do get another tank and set it up for him, because it will be easier to control his eating habits, at least long enough to make him fast for a day or two.
Anyway, Greetings everyone!
Oh, and by the way, I have a dog, too. Her name is Buffy. She's a 70 lb lab mix with rottie coloring. You wish your dog was as cool as mine.
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