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Today's a new day.

I usually start siphons by mouth if I don't have a siphon pump, but this is a very good method too and useful if you're worried about getting tank water in your mouth. I've definitely gotten a mouthful of sea urchin spines before, when cleaning out leftovers from a sea star's meal. Not very tasty ;)

If your tank is deep enough, you can also do the U-shape method within the tank itself and just fill the hose with tank water, although most small tanks are too shallow for this. The most important things are having the hose completely full (no air pockets) and holding your thumbs over the ends of the hose tightly until one end is in the tank and the other over a bucket. This method is trickier to get the hang of, but can be worth it for sanitary reasons.

I'm gonna show you a trick to start a syphon that's so easy, so simple, but relatively unknown, and you will love me forever for showing you this! :lol: Never have to get a mouthful of tank water and microcritters again!

I learned how to do this by watching this video, which demonstrates it several times, so I link this video here often!

At the 2 minute mark, he shows the U-shaped method, but then another method which is the one I use, and can be used on small, heavily planted tanks, or if you keep watching the video he shows how to start a syphon and substrate vac different substrates, and tanks at all different heights, so even low down tanks you can start a syphon using his method.

Only difference in my methods is I stick my thumb over the end of the tubing that's in the bucket when I'm starting the syphon, and when I'm pausing the flow to move the bell part or avoiding sucking up fry, shrimp, or curious fish... rather than crimping the tubing the way the man does in the video. I find it easier to control.

(Aside: DOES ANYONE KNOW WHAT THAT PART IS REALLY CALLED?? Drives me mad that I don't know what to call it!)

I learned it pretty early on when I began maintaining my dad's tank when he became too frail in his old age to maintain the tank, but both parents wanted to keep it, so I began learning by watching youtube vids, reading around, and joining this forum! I usually have aquarium youtubers playing in the background while I do tank maintenance or while I'm messing around with the tanks. :):fish:

Put in this way - my parents had an aviary and aquatics business for around 4 decades I believe, so water changed and gravel vac-ed thousands of tanks, and when my dad first saw me starting the syphon to clean his tank using this method, he was gobsmacked! Made me show him a few times how I did it. It's just angling the head part and submerging it until it's full, lifting it slightly out of the water (head upwards at an angle) to let air in, but then quickly submerging it again, still upwards at an angle, so the head part fills again, and bam, you have a syphon flowing!

Dad was like "I wish I'd known about this 50 years ago." He'd been butting heads with me a lot at first, since I learned more modern fish keeping methods here, while he was an old school fish keeper who was wary of water changes, always had charcoal in filters, rarely gravel vac-ed, and would do things like turn the filter off for a few days to "rest the motor". Without telling me.... had a big tank crash when that happened since it was overstocked.

Anyway, sorry for the rambling. Main point is the brilliant trick to start a syphon that will change your life, and impressed my hard to impress father who was so surprised I had learned something he'd never figured out or seen before, and made him trust me more that I knew what I was doing and could do a good job of maintaining his tank. :)
 
Is the gravel vac a typical one with a bell type shape on the end that goes into the gravel, like this?
View attachment 335346

If so, the end piece is easily removed from the actual hosing, then you can use the smaller hose in the same way to clean a smaller tank, or to clean around plants without disturbing their roots.

The only downside to that is you need to suck the other end of the hose to start the syphon and it's a knack to do that without getting a mouthful of not so tasty tank water...

You can get these gravel vacs in a variety of sizes, I have a small and slim one for my small tanks/fry tanks, but have also used just airline hosing or a turkey baster to clean small containers like fry containers.

The trick to start a syphon is that the end in the fishtank must be higher than the other end in order to start the syphon. Usually easy if the tank is on a stand or cabinet, bucket on the floor, put one end of hose into the tank, other above the bucket, suck until water begins to flow down the hose and is pretty far along, then remove that end from your mouth and stick it in the bucket before it reaches your mouth!
No, it's a Fluval gravel vac. The gravel vac is more controllable unlike the one you mentioned.
 
That's great! :D 3cm depth is normal and fine, and will work for most plants. :flowers:;)


You absolutely can, but you also don't need to wait until it's completed! Tanks are constantly evolving anyway, they're never "finished", if you know what I mean? And people are more than welcome to enter tanks even if it's a build in progress and you haven't got to where you want it yet. We've even had an empty tank with decor, a stunning daphnia colony bottle, and a lovely planted container only containing snails entered before! Right, @Fishmanic ?

You'd be more than welcome to enter any of your current tanks or builds in progress, explaining your plans, when they're the right size tank for that month, and you should! It's just for fun, a social forum thing, a great way to learn, interact on the forum, and share your aquariums and plans. :D It's not a hardcore competition, so if you enter without worrying about whether you'll win or not, because even if you don't win, there's always next time! I've entered loads of times just for fun, even knowing there was no way I'd win, just because there hadn't been many entries, and it encourages others to join in too. :)

So I entered many times just for fun, worked on one tank to get it looking as good as possible, took several photos until I found one I liked, and it was a nice surprise when I did win once! Then you get a banner under your name. You can also enter the fish of the month and pet of the month contests if you have other animals. :)

It absolutely is! There's a lot of misinformation on the internet too, so always worth checking the source. For precise and accurate info on most any species of fish, Seriously Fish has profiles on most any species of fish you're likely to come across in the hobby, and it's written by scientists and experts in the hobby, so you can rely on the information there, compared to random blogs or pages when you do a random Google search. You can look up any species you want, or have, and see what requirements they have, and can check if they'll be suitable for your current set ups, or if they'd need a larger tank, or different temp range, or wouldn't mix well with your current fish, info like that.

Like, what fish do you have at the moment? As an example to show you, here's some profiles for some species of fish I keep. I searched "Seriously Fish bronze corydora" since that's the common name you see in the shops. It brings up this profile, which also gives you the species Latin name, since some species have different or shared common names, but the latin name is specific to each species and sub-type.

Bronze Corydoras are common in the hobby, as is an albino mutation; albino Corydoras may be albino versions of Corydoras aeneus (bronze cories), or they may be albino Corydoras paleatus (peppered Corydoras), or even albino versions of Corydoras sterbai! All three species are common in the hobby and available in most stores, but have some slightly different requirements. By looking them up on Seriously Fish, I was able to learn I could keep my Bronze and Sterbai Corydoras together, since they both tolerate harder water and are in my range for GH, but peppered cories (Corydoras paleatus) need a cooler temp than the others do, so I don't currently have that species.



So this is just an example of how important it is to have reliable info on species, especially before buying them, if possible! By reading the profile you learn the latin name, where they originate from and the habitats they need - especially important when you're setting up a tank or you're into biotopes. You also learn how large the fish can get at adult size (some fish sold in stores like bala sharks, common plecos and many loaches can get absolutely massive and need monster sized tanks or ponds once they get to adult size, and people buy them as cute babies, without realising how huge they will get, then either stunt the fish by keeping it in too small a tank, wind up with incompatible fish that fight and kill each other, or have a hard time rehoming them).

The Seriously Fish profile will also tell you what maintenance they need, what water conditions ranges they can live in, like the temperature range, pH, and water hardness. What diet they need, typical behaviour and compatibility (i.e: if they're a social fish that needs a group of the same species, or show aggression to tank mates and do or don't suit community tanks, etc), and even how to breed that species. So it's a really valuable and reliable resource, worth bookmarking! :book:


You are! We all are. We're all still learning and adapting as we learn more, and there's so much to learn in this hobby, and things do go wrong occasionally in this hobby. It's inevitable, and you're never alone there. No matter how long someone has been in the hobby, how hard they try, how experienced and knowledgeable they are, things still do go wrong now and then. Equipment can fail, tanks can fail, we're only human and make mistakes, or we follow advice that turned out to be wrong, but we were doing the best we could at the time, with what we know.

No one expects you to be perfect, I promise. :) We like to help, it's what the forum is for! So don't be afraid to admit to mistakes or ask for advice. Some places like some groups on Facebook or Reddit can have members who are harsh on beginners or people who make mistakes, and then drive people out of the hobby, but that isn't the culture here.

Here we want to help people, share and learn from each other, and help each other out so we all do better in our hobby, and can share our passion for the various areas of fishkeeping. If anyone is mean or breaks the rules, the mods are great here, just report the comment and let the mods handle it, but don't let it get to you. Take the advice that you find helpful and works for you, and leave the rest. :) We also all have good and bad days, and tone is hard to read by text. I know I've been too harsh on others at times when going through a rough time personally, then apologised and fortunately been forgiven when it's happened. We're all only human! But in general, most people here are lovely and helpful, want to help where they can, and people who break rules are handled well by the mods.

Wet Web Media is another really great, reliable source of info I often recommend checking out and bookmarking. Also written by known experts in the hobby, they can give advice if you write in, and it's always worth doing a search on their site if you're having a problem, since you can read their answers to previous questions about the same thing, and learn a lot that way. I've spend many hours reading advice there when I had an illness in my tanks, if I had a sick fish, things like that. I also emailed them and sent photos when I thought my otocinclus was carrying eggs, and got some lovely, helpful and quick responses from one of the experts there, Neal Monks.

So those two sites, and here of course, are places I recommend for learning more! Can also use the search feature here to find previous posts and threads on any topic or problem, or make your own thread if you want more personal or specific advice, or want to make a journal thread if you want to do a build/journal thread about a specific tank you own. Those are great fun, and people can be really helpful and supportive! :D




Exactly! We all make mistakes. I guarantee, there isn't a fish keeper in the hobby who hasn't made a mistake at some point. There's so much to learn in this hobby, and the learning curve at the beginning is steep, with a lot of misinformation online and from fish store employees even, so no one expects perfection, any mistake you make, you won't be the first one to make it, and others will want to help, as we are trying to here! :friends:You've already said the most important thing, and you're absolutely right. The important thing is how you work to learn from mistakes, and improve from there! That's the key, and it's why you can succeed in and enjoy this hobby, and participate and benefit from this forum, I hadn't been participating in threads much recently, I tend to dip in and out depending on how busy real life is, but here's a belated welcome to the forum from me anyway! :hi::fish:
Thanks for the late welcome. Like I mentioned, silvertip and cardinal tetras. That's the fish I currently have. What's Wet Web Media?
 
It's Tuesday. Got up just in time (9am) for a TV show I watch often. Fed the fish before the rerun was aired and currently watching it right now. Calculating a paludarium's size after watching the show. Carer's coming today, might go to a LFS to price the chameleon shrimp. I have wrote a list earlier and wanted to price the shrimp because I might own shrimp for the first time. Also today I'm also following advice from TFF members. I am more active from this thread than ever. Researching the plants I am going to use for the project and their care guides.
 
I'm gonna show you a trick to start a syphon that's so easy, so simple, but relatively unknown, and you will love me forever for showing you this! :lol: Never have to get a mouthful of tank water and microcritters again!

I learned how to do this by watching this video, which demonstrates it several times, so I link this video here often!

At the 2 minute mark, he shows the U-shaped method, but then another method which is the one I use, and can be used on small, heavily planted tanks, or if you keep watching the video he shows how to start a syphon and substrate vac different substrates, and tanks at all different heights, so even low down tanks you can start a syphon using his method.

Only difference in my methods is I stick my thumb over the end of the tubing that's in the bucket when I'm starting the syphon, and when I'm pausing the flow to move the bell part or avoiding sucking up fry, shrimp, or curious fish... rather than crimping the tubing the way the man does in the video. I find it easier to control.

(Aside: DOES ANYONE KNOW WHAT THAT PART IS REALLY CALLED?? Drives me mad that I don't know what to call it!)

I learned it pretty early on when I began maintaining my dad's tank when he became too frail in his old age to maintain the tank, but both parents wanted to keep it, so I began learning by watching youtube vids, reading around, and joining this forum! I usually have aquarium youtubers playing in the background while I do tank maintenance or while I'm messing around with the tanks. :):fish:

Put in this way - my parents had an aviary and aquatics business for around 4 decades I believe, so water changed and gravel vac-ed thousands of tanks, and when my dad first saw me starting the syphon to clean his tank using this method, he was gobsmacked! Made me show him a few times how I did it. It's just angling the head part and submerging it until it's full, lifting it slightly out of the water (head upwards at an angle) to let air in, but then quickly submerging it again, still upwards at an angle, so the head part fills again, and bam, you have a syphon flowing!

Dad was like "I wish I'd known about this 50 years ago." He'd been butting heads with me a lot at first, since I learned more modern fish keeping methods here, while he was an old school fish keeper who was wary of water changes, always had charcoal in filters, rarely gravel vac-ed, and would do things like turn the filter off for a few days to "rest the motor". Without telling me.... had a big tank crash when that happened since it was overstocked.

Anyway, sorry for the rambling. Main point is the brilliant trick to start a syphon that will change your life, and impressed my hard to impress father who was so surprised I had learned something he'd never figured out or seen before, and made him trust me more that I knew what I was doing and could do a good job of maintaining his tank. :)
I always call the large tube part the gravel vac or gravel attachment. The hose is the hose, and the siphon is the entire system because siphon is more of an action than an object.

I have started siphons using the method Cory shows in the video, and it does work well, but to be honest, I rarely use the gravel vac attachment anyway. I find that it slows the flow of the siphon too much for my liking. The gravel attachment doesn't suck up larger bits of detritus very well and ends up requiring more water to be removed in order to remove the same amount of detritus, compared to just using the hose by itself. Plus, I find that the large pieces of detritus or algae or whatnot can get stuck at the top of the attachment. I don't have any delicate critters in my tanks to worry about, and I don't have gravel anyway (I have sand) so I prefer the speed and efficiency of using the hose by itself. That's just my personal preference! And, I promise I'm normally very skilled at starting siphons by mouth haha. I've done it successfully many, many times. The urchin incident was an outlier due to the difficult positioning and setup of the tanks involved.
 
Thanks for the late welcome. Like I mentioned, silvertip and cardinal tetras. That's the fish I currently have. What's Wet Web Media?

Wet Web Media is a reliable and useful site for info and advice. Explore the page for yourself, there's too much there for me to explain it all, and it's also almost 1:30am here and I'm knackered. :)
It's Tuesday. Got up just in time (9am) for a TV show I watch often. Fed the fish before the rerun was aired and currently watching it right now. Calculating a paludarium's size after watching the show. Carer's coming today, might go to a LFS to price the chameleon shrimp. I have wrote a list earlier and wanted to price the shrimp because I might own shrimp for the first time. Also today I'm also following advice from TFF members. I am more active from this thread than ever. Researching the plants I am going to use for the project and their care guides.

What happened to the plan to do a water change yourself, with some help, on Tuesday?

That's not following our advice, I'm afraid. You're planning, fantasising and pricing up a new project, while neglecting the most important part, which is maintaining the tanks and fish you currently have.

Buying new fish, shrimp, tanks, equipment etc doesn't make you a hobbyist, and you can't just do the fun parts while leaving the hard work and dirty jobs to someone else. If you're not prepared to get stuck in and learn to do it for yourself, then that tank and fish will suffer, and people won't want to help you plan new tanks if we know you're not doing maintenance on the tanks you already have.

I'm not angry or arguing with you, by the way. A little disappointed, but it's your choice at the end of the day, and no one can make you. But you have plenty of useful, step by step advice for how to gravel vac and water change your tanks, it isn't hard, and is the most essential part of fish keeping. Without that, tanks fail and crash, fish die, and the beginner then loses interest in the hobby because it wasn't successful. I don't want that for you, but all the advice in the world won't help if you're not prepared to do things yourself.
 
I always call the large tube part the gravel vac or gravel attachment. The hose is the hose, and the siphon is the entire system because siphon is more of an action than an object.

Very true that syphoning is more of an action than an object!

I still use the bell end (that's what I want to call it, but I'm afraid it means something rather rude in the UK, but I don't intend it in that way! There must be a proper name for them... It's just tricky to know what to call it when explaining through text rather than showing, lol.
I have started siphons using the method Cory shows in the video, and it does work well, but to be honest, I rarely use the gravel vac attachment anyway. I find that it slows the flow of the siphon too much for my liking. The gravel attachment doesn't suck up larger bits of detritus very well and ends up requiring more water to be removed in order to remove the same amount of detritus, compared to just using the hose by itself. Plus, I find that the large pieces of detritus or algae or whatnot can get stuck at the top of the attachment. I don't have any delicate critters in my tanks to worry about, and I don't have gravel anyway (I have sand) so I prefer the speed and efficiency of using the hose by itself. That's just my personal preference!

I'm really sorry, that came across a bit like teaching my grandmother to suck eggs! I know that you're educated, experienced, and knowledgeable, I just get carried away sometimes, and love sharing that trick when others don't know about it, and I always think that even if you know already, someone else who is reading along might find it useful, you know? ;)I've also only been in the hobby personally for a few years, so still a beginner myself in most things. I'm just chatty at times, sorry! lol.

Plus you know marine stuff, which is so advanced and technical, that it's way above my head. I love science, was strong in biology and the social sciences, but I suck at mathematics, chemistry and physics. While I love admiring other people's marine tanks, I know I couldn't manage it myself! It's sadly beyond my budget too, I'm a low tech planted person, and still finding my own niches in the hobby. Leaning towards nano fish, but in larger tanks and larger schools. Setting up some dream tanks soon! I'm so excited to get them set up and stocked. Will probably make a journal thread to waffle away in when I'm finally ready to set them up, so only people who want to wade through my waffling have to suffer. :lol:

I agree that the bell end attachment can be super annoying, getting clogged with larger bits and needing to be unblocked, which isn't easy, and usually isn't needed with sand substrate, especially with a good filter and flow. My sand substrate tanks only usually need a quick sweep just above the surface, but I also have a tank that's half gravel, half sand, so needs a small gravel vac to clean the gravel. I'm keeping it half gravel because I have a hypothesis that the mulm, botanicals that I add like oak and almond leaves/alder cones etc, live plants, and letting algae grow promotes microcritters in that tank.

It's my pygmy cory colony tank, where I accidentally bred them in there, and the fry just raise themselves in there without much help from me! I suspect they live on those microcritters in between the feedings I give the tank, and you don't get much mulm with sand only. So I'm experimenting, since while I'm rubbish at some sciences, I'm a scientist at heart. :D Plus if it ain't broke,don't fix it! It's working for the pygmy cories and otos, so even though the gravel/sand mix is more annoying to maintain, I still love the tank and that the cories breed and do well in there.

And, I promise I'm normally very skilled at starting siphons by mouth haha. I've done it successfully many, many times. The urchin incident was an outlier due to the difficult positioning and setup of the tanks involved.

I believe you! You're fully qualified and certified even! How does urchin taste though? ;) I've certainly had a mouthful of tank water a few times! Oh well, probably good to give the immune system something to do. :lol:
 
I'm really sorry, that came across a bit like teaching my grandmother to suck eggs! I know that you're educated, experienced, and knowledgeable, I just get carried away sometimes, and love sharing that trick when others don't know about it, and I always think that even if you know already, someone else who is reading along might find it useful, you know?

Plus you know marine stuff, which is so advanced and technical, that it's way above my head. I love science, was strong in biology and the social sciences, but I suck at mathematics, chemistry and physics. While I love admiring other people's marine tanks, I know I couldn't manage it myself!
Absolutely no offense taken! It's true, the technique in the video isn't actually very well-known, so it's always good to share it around!

Also, I have a confession to make: I know very little about keeping marine tanks haha. At least, not in terms of how they're kept by hobbyists. I honestly have little interest in keeping any kind of reef tank with corals and such. Most of my experience is in the science and ecology of wild critters and a bit about basic maintenance of public aquaria with constant fresh water flow (so no need for cycling or anything like that).

How does urchin taste though? ;) I've certainly had a mouthful of tank water a few times! Oh well, probably good to give the immune system something to do. :lol:
It was old spines that a sea star had spit out after eating the urchin, so I only tasted seawater! The texture though.... eugh. It was like having a mouthful of dull toothpicks... But yeah, that's what I figure. The immune system needs a bit of a workout sometimes!

But I'll leave it at that so we don't take over Elephant's thread ;)
 
Wet Web Media is a reliable and useful site for info and advice. Explore the page for yourself, there's too much there for me to explain it all, and it's also almost 1:30am here and I'm knackered. :)


What happened to the plan to do a water change yourself, with some help, on Tuesday?

That's not following our advice, I'm afraid. You're planning, fantasising and pricing up a new project, while neglecting the most important part, which is maintaining the tanks and fish you currently have.

Buying new fish, shrimp, tanks, equipment etc doesn't make you a hobbyist, and you can't just do the fun parts while leaving the hard work and dirty jobs to someone else. If you're not prepared to get stuck in and learn to do it for yourself, then that tank and fish will suffer, and people won't want to help you plan new tanks if we know you're not doing maintenance on the tanks you already have.

I'm not angry or arguing with you, by the way. A little disappointed, but it's your choice at the end of the day, and no one can make you. But you have plenty of useful, step by step advice for how to gravel vac and water change your tanks, it isn't hard, and is the most essential part of fish keeping. Without that, tanks fail and crash, fish die, and the beginner then loses interest in the hobby because it wasn't successful. I don't want that for you, but all the advice in the world won't help if you're not prepared to do things yourself.
I will do the water change later today, don't worry. But dad is busy at the moment. I forgot to mention about the water change in the Tuesday post. I have some things to focus on. I understand that you're disappointed at me, but I was watching a TV show at the time. I had to spend time with family first thing in the morning. I'm trying to follow the advice, but couldn't sometimes because family is as important as the wellbeing of my fish.
 
What happened to the plan to do a water change yourself, with some help, on Tuesday?

That's not following our advice, I'm afraid. You're planning, fantasising and pricing up a new project, while neglecting the most important part, which is maintaining the tanks and fish you currently have.

Buying new fish, shrimp, tanks, equipment etc doesn't make you a hobbyist, and you can't just do the fun parts while leaving the hard work and dirty jobs to someone else. If you're not prepared to get stuck in and learn to do it for yourself, then that tank and fish will suffer, and people won't want to help you plan new tanks if we know you're not doing maintenance on the tanks you already have.

I'm not angry or arguing with you, by the way. A little disappointed, but it's your choice at the end of the day, and no one can make you. But you have plenty of useful, step by step advice for how to gravel vac and water change your tanks, it isn't hard, and is the most essential part of fish keeping. Without that, tanks fail and crash, fish die, and the beginner then loses interest in the hobby because it wasn't successful. I don't want that for you, but all the advice in the world won't help if you're not prepared to do things yourself.
Sorry... :( I understand that you're disappointed in me, but I had to focus on other things too. I am constantly busy all the time, which mean that I may not follow all advice from other members. I have a lot of work to do today, and focusing with family is one of them. Work is everywhere and I am trying my best to follow advice you may get for me.
 
Sorry... :( I understand that you're disappointed in me, but I had to focus on other things too. I am constantly busy all the time, which mean that I may not follow all advice from other members. I have a lot of work to do today, and focusing with family is one of them. Work is everywhere and I am trying my best to follow advice you may get for me.

No need to be sorry, or worry if some internet stranger is slightly disappointed! Honestly, not a big deal.

But I'm going to blunt and straight forward with you - tank maintenance is essential, and you mentioned one tank hadn't had a water change for like six weeks. Spending time with family is important, yes, and we all have other demands on our time. But when we chose to keep live animals, and bring them into our homes, stick them in a glass box where they have no choice but to live in the conditions we provide, and they can't escape - it's a responsibility that can't and shouldn't be avoided.

Dogs need feeding and walking, interaction and training. Poop also needs to be picked up, which isn't a pleasant part of keeping dogs, but is essential, and any pet has less fun things that must be done for their welfare, and we've agreed to do by taking them home. Same goes for fish.

But you are actively making a choice not to do it. You're going to a fish shop to price up (and maybe buy) more living creatures and new projects, instead of doing the maintenance on your current tanks. Personally, I don't think that's the right choice, but that's my opinion, and the choices are yours to make.
 
No need to be sorry, or worry if some internet stranger is slightly disappointed! Honestly, not a big deal.

But I'm going to blunt and straight forward with you - tank maintenance is essential, and you mentioned one tank hadn't had a water change for like six weeks. Spending time with family is important, yes, and we all have other demands on our time. But when we chose to keep live animals, and bring them into our homes, stick them in a glass box where they have no choice but to live in the conditions we provide, and they can't escape - it's a responsibility that can't and shouldn't be avoided.

Dogs need feeding and walking, interaction and training. Poop also needs to be picked up, which isn't a pleasant part of keeping dogs, but is essential, and any pet has less fun things that must be done for their welfare, and we've agreed to do by taking them home. Same goes for fish.

But you are actively making a choice not to do it. You're going to a fish shop to price up (and maybe buy) more living creatures and new projects, instead of doing the maintenance on your current tanks. Personally, I don't think that's the right choice, but that's my opinion, and the choices are yours to make.
I understand that. I am doing a water change later in the day, as I mentioned to you before. Dad's busy doing the living room floorboards at the moment. But I have a carer coming at 3:30pm my time.
 
Why not ask the carer to help you do the water changes? Are the tanks in the same room that's having floorboards laid?
 
The tanks are near the kitchen, not in the living room. I can ask the carer to help doing the water changes. :) I can focus on water changes first, then the shrimp.
Good luck! You'll do great, it's much easier than you imagine. Let us know how it goes, and hope you have a lovely day. :)
 

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