what is the GH of the water currently?
I have no idea
. Can't find a definitive answer from our water company and haven't got a test. My county is generally said to have some of the hardest water in all of the UK however, which as you can imagine is not ideal considering the fish I keep (listed below).
Hoping to grab myself a test kit when I can next, it'll be a massive help.
Aside from this, pH is a good 7.6, nitrite, nitrate and ammonia are virtually at 0.00ppm at all times with 30-40% weekly water changes.
I namely keep plecs native to the Orinoco river (orinoco angel/snowball, blue phantom, and sailfin plec), cardinal and rummynose tetras, giant African fan shrimp, clown loaches, a red tail shark, upside down catfish (synodontis nigriventris) and a few survivor fish (1 pygmy cory, 3 c. aeneus corys, and 1 otocinclus of an unknown species).
Off the bat, yes, I know I've fuplied up with keeping fish right on the opposite end of the water-hardness spectrum, but I'm adamant on keeping them and that's why I've made this thread, before any negative replies come in.
I also use Indian Almond Leaves and drift wood to softer it further.
There's a big ol' lump of driftwood in my tank, I've never really looked into the almond leaves, but now that you've reminded me I'll be expanding my options.
Hello! We're in a similar boat - my water has a HIGH pH and is VERY VERY hard. I purchased a cheap RO unit online ($50 USD) and mix it with a little tap water to stabilize the pH.
You can use exclusively RO water (which would have zero GH/KH and the pH would naturally be acidic), or you can use RO but add minerals back either by using the commercial mineral salts or mixing the RO water with the harder tap water. The extent you decide/proceed depends upon the fish species.
"Pure" water includes RO water, distilled water, and basically rainwater. The latter may be on the acidic side respecting pH, but it will have basically no dissolved minerals, and an acidic pH tends to complement this. Water is a powerful solvent, and easily assimilates substances it comes into contact with, such as minerals (calcium primarily) from limestone, etc.
As far as RO goes, I'm entirely up for it. Noticed that the local Maidenhead shop has an RO system, pretty cheap, you just bring in your own containers and they fill em up for you.
How does this go over when you're at home? I'm not a sciencey guy on a whole, so I kind of switch off when I read the words "Reverse Osmosis". It's all very well me getting an RO unit, but I've not got a scooby on how to configure it lol.
Would appreciate any further advice on RO, as it seems to be a good option.