I see someone's recommended Neon Tetras for your tank; just be aware that there are quite a few fish that aren't suitable for a newly-cycled (but not matured) tank. Now's the time to be getting a 'wants' list together. Try not to buy without checking here first, though. Always good to see someone going the fishless route. BTW, I'd be getting rid of those snail eggs now or you'll be absolutely over-run with them. Try to keep some of the trumpet snails, though - they do a good job of keeping the substrate turned.
Hiya vinylman.
Are you suggesting Neons might not be good for a new tank, or have I misunderstood?
I've been to Paws for Thought on York Road a lot, they have Neon Tetras in a tank with Peppered Corys which both look visually very good and I assume they get on together in the long term. From everything I've read so far they would seem to be a good mix. They seem to occupy different areas of the tank.
As it's our first foray into fish and I want to keep it very simple. I've mentioned this combination of fish in this thread, I guess it will be OK?
I will be getting my fish from there, it's only a few minutes from home but I've had suggestions for more unusual species which they don't stock.
As the thread is getting long, I'l recap where I'm at:
It's a weird and small tank with a measured 50 litres of water in it after substrate and decorations etc.
I've not bothered filling the tank fully for cycling
I've read that the peppered corys like to gulp air and need space at the top of the tank
I've been cycling with StressZyme and plants in, as well as Homebase Ammonia and some fish food
It's been cycling since the 11th and recently I've seen the Nitrite rise and fall
Accurate Nitrate readings are a nightmare in the lower registers, so ignore most of it on my reading graphs
I'm doing a full set of timed reading at the moment to get a proper handle on where the NO2-NO3 conversion is at
I'm not in a rush for fish
What I need:
Someone to offer an opinion of whether my tank is ready
Further stocking advice based on popular, and very easy to find species
Any more advice folks? Regards, Duncan.