Final Mile
New Member
Ok, I was planning the tank setup but realized that even with all the info I need in my hands, without any experience whatsoever there's still a considerable chance that this will end up in r/shittyaquariums. Below, I'll describe how the setup will look like along with all the relevant info along, then you guys tell me what you think.
Tank placement: on a nightstand under a window (2 - 3 hours of direct sunlight every day) - the nightstand has 40cm x 40cm of available space and I won't risk placing more than 20kg on top of it.
Tank: 35cm x 22cm x 16cm generic glass tank w/ lid, 11 liters w/ black wallpaper at the back.
Lighting: 12w white LED generic desklamp x1.
Gravel: Fine/medium generic black gravel on top of regular potting soil.
Filter: generic hang on filter with little space to allocate bio media.
Lid: N/A (blocked by the filter, otherwise always on).
Fish: generic beta fish x1 or shrimp?
Plants: fully planted tank.
Heater: N/A (temperatures here hang around 25°C - 35°C, usually tend to stabilize around 30°C during the day and 27°C at night).
Co2: N/A.
My concerns about all this: the tank seems too small to allocate any fish, yet this is the biggest tank I could find that fits the weight and dimension parameters I need. There is no other place to allocate a tank in this house. There is no shrimp readily available for purchase in this place. Without fish, the plants won't get any waste to use up as nutrients. The plants are the priority, screw the fish. The selection of plants sold here is very limited. I'm worried that stuff may die due to extremely high water temperatures (39°C+ on hot days, 44°C+ on the hottest days - yes, really). I have no means of refrigerating the water. The temperature will never drop below 25°C, take my word on it. As explained by Jay on YT, I would like to keep a no-water-change-tank, though I don't think a single hang on filter would manage to allocate enough media to perform anaerobic filtration, setting up deep substrate to create anaerobic zones would also severely decrease the size of the already too small of a tank, without mentioning the small amount of contained water will make for a relative unbalance in water quality. Adding a 2nd hang on filter may not be possible due to the small size of the tank. I'm unsure if the planted Walstad-like setup would manage to produce enough water "purification" for the fish, even if a single beta. Beta fish sold around here all come half-dead, half-alive, resurrection skills needed. No lid means giving the fish the possibility of suicide by jumping if depression levels build up too fast. Lack of personal interest in fish diet will likely lead to using the exact same pellet for a long time, possibly bringing the sanity levels of the fish down to dangerous levels, also leading to suicide.
*I'm aware that this setup may not be possible at all!* That's why I want to hear the honest opinion of you experienced guys. Guide me through this one.
Tank placement: on a nightstand under a window (2 - 3 hours of direct sunlight every day) - the nightstand has 40cm x 40cm of available space and I won't risk placing more than 20kg on top of it.
Tank: 35cm x 22cm x 16cm generic glass tank w/ lid, 11 liters w/ black wallpaper at the back.
Lighting: 12w white LED generic desklamp x1.
Gravel: Fine/medium generic black gravel on top of regular potting soil.
Filter: generic hang on filter with little space to allocate bio media.
Lid: N/A (blocked by the filter, otherwise always on).
Fish: generic beta fish x1 or shrimp?
Plants: fully planted tank.
Heater: N/A (temperatures here hang around 25°C - 35°C, usually tend to stabilize around 30°C during the day and 27°C at night).
Co2: N/A.
My concerns about all this: the tank seems too small to allocate any fish, yet this is the biggest tank I could find that fits the weight and dimension parameters I need. There is no other place to allocate a tank in this house. There is no shrimp readily available for purchase in this place. Without fish, the plants won't get any waste to use up as nutrients. The plants are the priority, screw the fish. The selection of plants sold here is very limited. I'm worried that stuff may die due to extremely high water temperatures (39°C+ on hot days, 44°C+ on the hottest days - yes, really). I have no means of refrigerating the water. The temperature will never drop below 25°C, take my word on it. As explained by Jay on YT, I would like to keep a no-water-change-tank, though I don't think a single hang on filter would manage to allocate enough media to perform anaerobic filtration, setting up deep substrate to create anaerobic zones would also severely decrease the size of the already too small of a tank, without mentioning the small amount of contained water will make for a relative unbalance in water quality. Adding a 2nd hang on filter may not be possible due to the small size of the tank. I'm unsure if the planted Walstad-like setup would manage to produce enough water "purification" for the fish, even if a single beta. Beta fish sold around here all come half-dead, half-alive, resurrection skills needed. No lid means giving the fish the possibility of suicide by jumping if depression levels build up too fast. Lack of personal interest in fish diet will likely lead to using the exact same pellet for a long time, possibly bringing the sanity levels of the fish down to dangerous levels, also leading to suicide.
*I'm aware that this setup may not be possible at all!* That's why I want to hear the honest opinion of you experienced guys. Guide me through this one.
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