willowstwin
Fishaholic
Hi All
some of you may have read some of my earlier posts about a tank here at work... here is the background:
It's a large, 4 year old tank (I'm guessing between 120 - 180 litres - it's in a display cabinet and I can't get round the sides to measure). Because it is in a display cabinet on a VERY sunny corridor, it is ridden with algae, as in you can't see into the tank.
I've been told that the filter (one of the large external fluval ones) died about 3 - 4 weeks ago - a major waste of a large mature sponge plus ceramic rings. I checked the water immediately and the levels are fine (which I'm shocked at), even the nitrates weren't too high. Currently in there (well, from what I can see) are a maximum of 4 each harlequin rasboras and rummy nose tetras. It's a shock they are still alive, however, this is not the bad part (it's not as easy as a gradual clean and a new filter).
The technician up there thinks it's an eyesore (which, to be fair, it doesn't look too nice), and has stated that the tank will be emptied by the end of this week and what's even worse is that he is threatening all sorts of disgusting disposal methods, from flushing them down the toilet, to collecting them up, putting them in a bag and dropping a brick on them, to adding conc acid to the tank I actually hate that man right now.
Unfortunately, pay day has been and gone and after a couple of huge bills I can't afford a huge tank like they are housed in now. However, I can afford a 44 litre tank from a local pet shop (12 x 15 x 15 inches). That comes out at 12 US gallons, so I'm pretty sure 8 (max) x 1 inch fish would be ok in there space wise. However, I'm terrified they will die of shock. I have a spare filter, and I left the extra donated media wedged in my current filter, so I could use that to put in the new one....
What would be the easiest way to intoduce them with minimal shock? Should I gather the water from their current tank and use that?
I don't think they will live for much longer, even in a clean fully working tank (I've read they have an average life span of 3 - 4 years), but I just can't bear the thought of them being squished or poisoned or burned or ARGH
Please help! Would the above mentioned tank be ok? and should I add water from the current tank?
(a very upset) Willow
some of you may have read some of my earlier posts about a tank here at work... here is the background:
It's a large, 4 year old tank (I'm guessing between 120 - 180 litres - it's in a display cabinet and I can't get round the sides to measure). Because it is in a display cabinet on a VERY sunny corridor, it is ridden with algae, as in you can't see into the tank.
I've been told that the filter (one of the large external fluval ones) died about 3 - 4 weeks ago - a major waste of a large mature sponge plus ceramic rings. I checked the water immediately and the levels are fine (which I'm shocked at), even the nitrates weren't too high. Currently in there (well, from what I can see) are a maximum of 4 each harlequin rasboras and rummy nose tetras. It's a shock they are still alive, however, this is not the bad part (it's not as easy as a gradual clean and a new filter).
The technician up there thinks it's an eyesore (which, to be fair, it doesn't look too nice), and has stated that the tank will be emptied by the end of this week and what's even worse is that he is threatening all sorts of disgusting disposal methods, from flushing them down the toilet, to collecting them up, putting them in a bag and dropping a brick on them, to adding conc acid to the tank I actually hate that man right now.
Unfortunately, pay day has been and gone and after a couple of huge bills I can't afford a huge tank like they are housed in now. However, I can afford a 44 litre tank from a local pet shop (12 x 15 x 15 inches). That comes out at 12 US gallons, so I'm pretty sure 8 (max) x 1 inch fish would be ok in there space wise. However, I'm terrified they will die of shock. I have a spare filter, and I left the extra donated media wedged in my current filter, so I could use that to put in the new one....
What would be the easiest way to intoduce them with minimal shock? Should I gather the water from their current tank and use that?
I don't think they will live for much longer, even in a clean fully working tank (I've read they have an average life span of 3 - 4 years), but I just can't bear the thought of them being squished or poisoned or burned or ARGH
Please help! Would the above mentioned tank be ok? and should I add water from the current tank?
(a very upset) Willow