BigBurgassio
Fish Fanatic
I noticed someone mentioned using rain water on another thread, does it have benefits over tap water for aquariums ?
My tap water is listed as moderately soft, would that be similar to rain water ?it's just generally more neutral than a lot of tap waters ( the ground water in my area is extremely hard & alkaline )... depending on your area though, your tap water may be fine, & the rain may not be neutral ( acid rain ) rain can pick up pollutants on it's way to the ground, both factory / auto pollution, or natural... in the US this year, many areas are seeing the effects of Canadian wildfires
The table shows that all the parameters they've measured are well below the maximum allowed levels. Much better water than some areas of the UK.
'Lerwick Shetland' supply zone has hardness 66.35 ppm and 3.72 dH. That's soft, verging on very soft as far as fish keeping is concerned. It's in the 'Water hardness data 2022' pdf here
edited to add the word not, to make it read not a big deal.Acid rain, or acid deposition, is a broad term that includes any form of precipitation with acidic components, such as sulfuric or nitric acid that fall to the ground from the atmosphere in wet or dry forms. This can include rain, snow, fog, hail or even dust that is acidic.
That's good news to hear my water is so favorable for many different fishAgree, there are literally thousands of soft water fish species. Consider yourself very fortunate, we have members who would love this water.