That would be best, yes. I have rather hard water and have kept neons but they did not really prosper in my water. Many did survive for about a year but they really should live longer than that.
check out the main page pinned topics. 2nd pinned topic down "livebearer gender determination" that should help you.I'm a little worried my 'female' guppies might be young males.
How can I check for certain ?
check out the main page pinned topics. 2nd pinned topic down "livebearer gender determination" that should help you.I'm a little worried my 'female' guppies might be young males.
How can I check for certain ?
Regarding the water hardness. If your kettle has loads of scale inside it and the taps also 'fur' up then the water is hard. No scaling usually means it's soft.
You can get test kits for testing the water hardness but any local lfs should be able to tell you.
Agreeing about the Neons, they can be hard to keep in the beginning. I tried to keep them as a beginner and they all died.
I have kept both guppies and platies successfully even with soft water. I've got PH problems at the moment, it's normally about 6.8-7.0 but it's dropped to 6 with new sand substrate and a new piece of bog wood. I can't say I've noticed any difference in my platies but this is a short term issue. Over a longer term there could well be problems with them.
Good luck with what ever you choose to stock
You could add some amano shrimp they are really nice and make the tank interesting and a nice housekeeper isn't bad at all or maybe some corrys they're school fish like tetra and they are really cool. Might be a good idea if you go to your LFS and see what they have and see if the fish you want are all compatible. Good luck on the stocking .
14 german degrees or 250 ppm, is fairly hard water. I would avoid "soft water" loving fish. The guppies should be just great in that water. Platies will also do well in that water.