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Today's a new day.

Yeah, I can do that, but floating plants can overtake the tank.
If you have large floating plants like frogbit, water lettuce, or salvinia, then they'll be much easier to remove when you have excess growth. Duckweed is a bother to deal with primarily because of its tiny size, but large floaters are easier to manage. As others have said, just remove some of them every week during maintenance if you need to.

If you are not prepared to maintain your tank, then maybe you shouldn't have one. Autism is not an excuse for not being able to do it I'm afraid
It's true that there are few excuses for not maintaining a tank that you wanted to have in the first place. However, don't let this discourage you from continuing to have tanks! I think other people have said this before, elsewhere on the forum, but you are lucky that your parents help you maintain your tank. Despite any unfair deals, you should thank them for helping you. The reason you should thank them is because their help gives you the opportunity to learn how to do it yourself without having to worry about your fish. If you can't do maintenance one week, you know that one of your parents can do it, so you don't have to worry about your fish.

Of course, you will not have your parents' help once you move out. So, while you do have their help, try to find techniques or tricks that allow you to do maintenance on your own. If you end up failing some weeks, don't stress. Your parents can take care of the tank, which will allow you to learn from your failure and try to problem-solve for next time. If you keep learning and problem-solving, eventually you'll find a way to be able to do tank maintenance on your own.

It does sound like your main problem is lifting and carrying heavy water. You don't need to go to the gym, but I agree that practicing lifting small volumes of water will help you improve your strength. If you have a medical condition that gives you weak muscles, then you will need to find a different solution. That might mean carrying only small volumes of water, or purchasing tools like the python hose system once you're living on your own.
 
Cleaning algae off the tank glass, trimming plants and water changes every week are part of the fishkeeping hobby. It's something you MUST do. It's the same as grooming training and exercising a dog, you MUST do it.

If you are not prepared to maintain your tank, then maybe you shouldn't have one. Autism is not an excuse for not being able to do it I'm afraid
Yes, I agree. I'm trying my best to do my hobby. I am prepared to do the rest of the tank, but not carrying heavy stuff.
 
Fish tanks are stress if you let them go, or if you depend on others to do the work. They're supposed to be relaxing sources of stress relief!

You do a little bit of work, put plants in to make the fish happier, and watch your feeding.

Is the reason your Dad has to completely clean the tank because you feed twice a day, and food is uneaten? It's something to think about while you're changing water.
You want your own space and large tanks for projects, but if you don't solve the problem of caring for a tiny tank, it can't happen. You have to learn to take car of your things yourself.
No, the reason for Dad to clean the tank is because there is unseen fish poop on the gravel. That can be done on the gravel vac.
 
Yes, I agree. I'm trying my best to do my hobby. I am prepared to do the rest of the tank, but not carrying heavy stuff.
Maybe stick to nano tanks if you can’t handle water changes. Unfortunately that’s bone of the biggest parts of fishkeeping. If you need help with that, I don’t blame your parents for not wanting you to have more/larger tanks
 
Maybe stick to nano tanks if you can’t handle water changes. Unfortunately that’s bone of the biggest parts of fishkeeping. If you need help with that, I don’t blame your parents for not wanting you to have more/larger tanks
I can handle some water changes but even with nano tanks, it take time. So yeah, nano tanks need water changes like any other tank. The hobby is for me, but I have to learn more on water changes :)
 
Today is another day, Sunday. I'm about to feed the tetras in the morning. Got up at 10am and constantly thinking about the tanks. I don't like tanks with fake plants, as it's sad looking. Everything is okay at the moment. The oldest labradoodle is recovering from ACL injuries from both back legs. Kept an eye on her yesterday night while mum and dad went out. Planning takes lots of visions and I can pick one that's right for the 30 x 30 x 45cm aquarium I have for over a year. The rules stay the same, and I understand the parents don't like me. I'm thinking of phoenix rasboras or green neon tetras, a smaller cousin of the cardinal tetra. They're not as colourful as the cardinals, but they can fit in 41L aquaria according to Seriously Fish.

I know some of the essentials of the fishkeeping hobby, but water changes are a struggle for myself. The fish don't have TB after a year and that's good news. Learning how to gravel vac as always when water changes happen. A lot of good stuff and bad stuff can happen to the hobby. Waiting for the deal to finish, which may take months to actually complete.
 
Today is another day, Sunday. I'm about to feed the tetras in the morning. Got up at 10am and constantly thinking about the tanks. I don't like tanks with fake plants, as it's sad looking. Everything is okay at the moment. The oldest labradoodle is recovering from ACL injuries from both back legs. Kept an eye on her yesterday night while mum and dad went out. Planning takes lots of visions and I can pick one that's right for the 30 x 30 x 45cm aquarium I have for over a year. The rules stay the same, and I understand the parents don't like me. I'm thinking of phoenix rasboras or green neon tetras, a smaller cousin of the cardinal tetra. They're not as colourful as the cardinals, but they can fit in 41L aquaria according to Seriously Fish.

I know some of the essentials of the fishkeeping hobby, but water changes are a struggle for myself. The fish don't have TB after a year and that's good news. Learning how to gravel vac as always when water changes happen. A lot of good stuff and bad stuff can happen to the hobby. Waiting for the deal to finish, which may take months to actually complete.
Have you tried running a hose to the tank?
 
My school holiday day by day routine is: Wake up at 10 or 11am. Feed the fish (morning and evening). Spend most of the day on TFF. Do water changes if required. Spend time with family. Go bushwalking with mum or dad. Have dinner. Spend the rest of the night going on TFF. Go to sleep at 10 or 11pm.

What's your routine?

I live near two lakes, Booragoon Lake and Blue Gum Lake from both directions from my house. I go bushwalking at Blue Gum lake and walk around Booragoon Lake with one of the dogs.
 
I found my younger sister's old Petworx 10L 22cm cube tank in the shed, hidden away in a cupboard. I am thinking of doing an aquarium with some easy, small plants, without any fish, but might add Australian chameleon (ninja) shrimp as an alternative to cherry shrimp since no fish stores in my area sell cherry shrimp. I just need to do some research on chameleon shrimp and to see if they go in a planted tank. A fish store has shrimp a tank full of chameleon shrimp and a planted aquarium with them and shrimp-friendly nano fish. Currently planning on a vision of an aquascape for shrimp. And then do some research on the requirements of chameleon shrimp.
 
Get off TFF so much and take the time.

If it takes you an hour to do water changes with a smaller container, then guess what? It takes an hour. Use a teacup if you have to. The fish deserve good conditions.

I can handle some water changes but even with nano tanks, it take time. So yeah, nano tanks need water changes like any other tank. The hobby is for me, but I have to learn more on water changes :)


The quote above could not be clearer. It's your words. Scoop water out. Put new water in. Find the time. You have learned how now. If you can't make the time, find homes for your fish, sell your tank and buy your parents something they like to thank them for the work they've done for you with the tank.

I am an older person, and there may come a time when I can't physically care for my fish. When that happens, I will rehome my fish and close my tanks. One of my mentors kept it going til he was 92, but when he couldn't provide care for his fish he got them to someone who could. I never heard him make an excuse.
 
Get off TFF so much and take the time.

If it takes you an hour to do water changes with a smaller container, then guess what? It takes an hour. Use a teacup if you have to. The fish deserve good conditions.




The quote above could not be clearer. It's your words. Scoop water out. Put new water in. Find the time. You have learned how now. If you can't make the time, find homes for your fish, sell your tank and buy your parents something they like to thank them for the work they've done for you with the tank.

I am an older person, and there may come a time when I can't physically care for my fish. When that happens, I will rehome my fish and close my tanks. One of my mentors kept it going til he was 92, but when he couldn't provide care for his fish he got them to someone who could. I never heard him make an excuse.
Yes, I understand that. But I'm not going to give up the hobby like I did with art. Let's talk about the 10L 22cm cube fishless project instead. We're not turning the thread into an argument. I understand that I'm struggling, but I'll get there eventually. Aquarists struggle at one time, and they then get up again.
 
Yes, I understand that. But I'm not going to give up the hobby like I did with art. Let's talk about the 10L 22cm cube fishless project instead.

You're procrastinating, young lady.

I'm not a mum, but putting on my stern mum voice, and telling you the exact lessons my parents taught me.

When you have animals, you put their needs first before yours. Before we were allowed to get a pet, we had to research everything we could about them before we were allowed to even consider it. And this was in the days before internet access at your fingertips, so it meant reading my parents reference books, getting out library books, talking to other people who kept the same kind of animals, meet some in shops etc, and be totally sure we could provide what the animal needed, for the lifetime of the animal. They'd make us prepare like a report before they'd even consider letting us get a pet.

Research included - compatibility with the other pets. What housing/habitat does it need as a young animal, and once it's full grown? A newfie puppy is adorable, but you have to consider how massive they get as adults, and the extra care and shorter lifespan involved. Things to consider when getting a new animal. Is everyone else in the house on board or at least, not put out by the pet. No allergies/phobias etc, so my brother couldn't have a snake, my mum was nervous about them, and he didn't demonstrate enough responsibility or have space for a large snake.

What diet does it need, can we access and afford it?
Vet care expected?
Cost of the habitat/where do we keep it?
Is it a social animal that needs friends, or solitary?
Lifespan?
Can you commit to the animal for it's lifespan?

And the answers had to be honest, we had to be prepared to do all the care it needed ourselves (although of course our parents helped when there was a problem, or looked after the animal if we had something come up and couldn't for whatever reason that day).

Right now, you're thinking of the tanks and their inhabitants more like decor, or new projects you want to daydream about. That's not cool when you already have tanks that you're not taking care of by yourself, but relying on your parents to do the hard work for you.

Stop. You can't do justice to the daydreaming tanks, if you're not willing to get stuck in to maintain the ones you have. Tanks take work to make and keep them beautiful, even "natural scapes" don't just get like that by accident, and maintain water quality all on their own.

When we got up in the morning, got home from school, got home from activities - animal care came first, before any of our own wants or needs. If the pet needs cleaning out, that gets done before we could relax and play computer games saying we'd do it later, or have a nap/snack, not when the animals needed feeding! Pet care first, your own needs second. It's the responsibility you take on when you have pets, and your parents won't always be around to do the hard work parts for you. Trust me. As an older woman who has now lost both my parents, you'll thank them one day for teaching for responsibility and life lessons.

The fish and inverts you have now are living, feeling creatures, not just pretty decor. Poor water quality will stress, and eventually kill them. You're on holiday from school now? Then clean the tanks out, do the water changes, gravel vac, filter cleaning/glass cleaning, etc.


Do the necessary first. Then you can daydream, plan and sketch out what ideas you have for other tanks. But it's pointless to do that if you're not caring for your current tanks.
A typical plastic kitchen jug, or even a pyrex one, is not heavy. You can get buckets and bins that are on wheels that you could fill, warm, declorinate, then roll to the tanks, if they're on the same floor. Where there's a will, there's a way, and if you can't move 2 gallons of water at a time, or lift a jug of water from a table top bucket to the tank, or vice versa, then you have serious health issues, I hope that's not the case?

These two videos are very helpful for learning how to gravel vac properly, and control the flow of the water through the syphon. In the video, Cory crimps the hose to pause the flow, but I prefer just sticking my thumb over the end that's in the bucket when I want to pause the flow to move the syphon or avoid fish/shrimp etc.


 

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