Platies are also hard water fish like mollies, but gourami, glowlight tetras and kuhli loaches are soft water fish. Cherry barbs are a species whch can live in both.
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I dont know where you get your info from but your wrong. Gourami can do really well in hard water. Khuli loaches can do well in both if it's not extremly soft or extremly hard. I'm switching the glowlights for cherry barbs anyway so that doesnt matter either.Platies are also hard water fish like mollies, but gourami, glowlight tetras and kuhli loaches are soft water fish. Cherry barbs are a species whch can live in both.
Most kuhlI loaches out there are captive bred which means that they can adapt to any pH (unless extremely acidic or extremely alkaline) and GH (unless extremely hard). Your water should be okay for the kuhlI loachesKuhli loach
GH up to 5 dH or up to 90 ppm
GH 0 to 8 dH or 0 to 143 ppmPangio kuhlii summary page
www.fishbase.de
Platy
GH 9 to 19 dH or 160 to 340 ppm
GH 10 to 30 dH or 180 to 530 ppmXiphophorus maculatus summary page
www.fishbase.de
Xiphophorus maculatus – Platy — Seriously Fish
www.seriouslyfish.com
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If you already have fish you can keep them for the rest of their lives, but before buying any future fish research which fish suit your water.Then what do you suggest I do? I've put in new fish in the tank a week ago.
Unfortunately she can only Have one tank. So I guess at this point best thing is to redo the stocking. So.. what can I have in a 10 gallon hard water tank?I can see your dilemma, because you are obviously trying to support her in the hobby, and being a bearer of bad news is not a fun position to be in. If it were me,what I might try to do is maybe get a second 10gal and separate the fish into two groups, those that do well in hard water and those that prefer softer water. Then, I would test the tap water and see how different it is from "ideal" for each group, and do what's in your power realistically to change it. Maybe if your water is soft for the hard water group you add some substrate/rocks that naturally harden the water and let it ride (being careful to only do small water changes at a time). Likewise, if your water is hard, maybe you have a gallon of DI water on hand and you use a quart from it at every water change. Again, focusing on what is realistic and won't burn her out of the hobby, since I think especially in the fish hobby success builds on success