Fishguy134
New Member
First I'll start off with my Tank specs
1. 35 Gallon Long( A little over a foot and a half of water column) With several fish species
2. I keep nitrates around 20
3. Microdose Flourish excel every couple of days
4. PH is about 7.5
5. I dose Flourish Micro nutrients every couple of days
6. I have seven Anubias nana that seem to be doing just fine and growing quite well.
7. I just recently resubstrated, I took out two thirds of the old substrate (A Black and White decorative sand) and replaced most (Keeping a good chunk of it to raise the substrate depth and making sure not to crash the ecosystem) and put in Eco-complete planted substrate (Volcanic I think) a little more than a week and a half ago.
8. I did put a few fertilizer tabs underneath the substrate in the more heavily planted areas.
9. I had to plant many of the, about 2 cm into the substrate, because I have a few loaches that like to sift the gravel up and dig around a little, so I had to keep replanting the shallower plants.
10. I use RO water, because tap water is sketchy here and causes huge algae blooms. (Carbonates are absolutely out the roof)
My biggest concern so far is that the Life-glo T8 6700K bulbs I put in are only 15 watts bulbs for the two light fixtures, and I have read that a minimum of 3 watts per gallon is recommended. I didn't consider that the wattage could be insufficient because after I switched to these bulbs the old Sag plant in the old black and white sand substrate suddenly took off making chains.
Many of the Dwarf Sags I have replanted have stopped growing, and quite a few are just melting leaves (Not all leaves just one after the other) now after they were separated from their mother plant. Am I just being impatient? Is there anything I should do immediately to encourage new growth? Do Dwarf Sags just take a long time to establish themselves?
1. 35 Gallon Long( A little over a foot and a half of water column) With several fish species
2. I keep nitrates around 20
3. Microdose Flourish excel every couple of days
4. PH is about 7.5
5. I dose Flourish Micro nutrients every couple of days
6. I have seven Anubias nana that seem to be doing just fine and growing quite well.
7. I just recently resubstrated, I took out two thirds of the old substrate (A Black and White decorative sand) and replaced most (Keeping a good chunk of it to raise the substrate depth and making sure not to crash the ecosystem) and put in Eco-complete planted substrate (Volcanic I think) a little more than a week and a half ago.
8. I did put a few fertilizer tabs underneath the substrate in the more heavily planted areas.
9. I had to plant many of the, about 2 cm into the substrate, because I have a few loaches that like to sift the gravel up and dig around a little, so I had to keep replanting the shallower plants.
10. I use RO water, because tap water is sketchy here and causes huge algae blooms. (Carbonates are absolutely out the roof)
My biggest concern so far is that the Life-glo T8 6700K bulbs I put in are only 15 watts bulbs for the two light fixtures, and I have read that a minimum of 3 watts per gallon is recommended. I didn't consider that the wattage could be insufficient because after I switched to these bulbs the old Sag plant in the old black and white sand substrate suddenly took off making chains.
Many of the Dwarf Sags I have replanted have stopped growing, and quite a few are just melting leaves (Not all leaves just one after the other) now after they were separated from their mother plant. Am I just being impatient? Is there anything I should do immediately to encourage new growth? Do Dwarf Sags just take a long time to establish themselves?