All depends in the type of fish you want, because they are from all over the world, thus being from many different kinds of lakes and rivers. Some are sandier, some are rockier. It invlolves research to decide what you want, based on the fish you plan on getting.LoachLover said:Personally I think it looks better too. Not to mention most river and streams or lakes have a sandy are dirt bottom so it looks more natural.
I have that problem too. My tanks are pretty heavily planted and vacuuming among the plants is pretty much impossible. I get what I can and just hope the corys stir up things enough to move it to where I can get it the next time or where the filter will suck it up. I always end up sucking up a little sand when I vacuum though.Katchan said:rdd1952 I have lots of sporadic)sp?) planting in my tanks and find it hard to vacuum the crud off the top of the sand with either a-knocking the plants around b-getting a chunk of sand , but I guess practice makes perfect
This is true, but I think the majority of rivers/lakes/streams aren't as much gravel as it is dirt or sand. I think it's more of a gravel in europe though.taylorhedrich said:All depends in the type of fish you want, because they are from all over the world, thus being from many different kinds of lakes and rivers. Some are sandier, some are rockier. It invlolves research to decide what you want, based on the fish you plan on getting.LoachLover said:Personally I think it looks better too. Not to mention most river and streams or lakes have a sandy are dirt bottom so it looks more natural.
~Taylor~