I am blessed in New Zealand with fantastic water, and I have been reminded how lucky I am. I put on my thinking cap and thought what I would do if I were trying to keep fish in water that was as bad as some of yours.
Here are a couple of things that I thought about.
Firstly, most probably the best water you have is actually the water in your tank, therefore I would try to keep as much of that water as I could. So, I would therefore try to double the water capacity of my tanks by using sumps and the like or by reducing the stocking numbers, so the bio load is reduced. I would then be able to make smaller water changes and only use a small amount of the terrible source water at a time.
I would try to maintain as much of the rich organic water as I could. So as an idea, instead of dumping it I would put it into large containers filled with plants and then allow it to purify and then reuse it back into my display tank.
I may also try to set up my own water purification plant, which may consist of a UV filter and a Carbon-based filter, and just recycle the water I have with the occasional top up from the town supply.
The water in your tanks is most probably your biggest asset, but by doing 50% plus water changes and dumping it, you are going back to square one continually. And you are fighting a losing battle with rubbish water of dubious quality.
Think recycle. Reuse. I am interested in what you may come up with.
Here are a couple of things that I thought about.
Firstly, most probably the best water you have is actually the water in your tank, therefore I would try to keep as much of that water as I could. So, I would therefore try to double the water capacity of my tanks by using sumps and the like or by reducing the stocking numbers, so the bio load is reduced. I would then be able to make smaller water changes and only use a small amount of the terrible source water at a time.
I would try to maintain as much of the rich organic water as I could. So as an idea, instead of dumping it I would put it into large containers filled with plants and then allow it to purify and then reuse it back into my display tank.
I may also try to set up my own water purification plant, which may consist of a UV filter and a Carbon-based filter, and just recycle the water I have with the occasional top up from the town supply.
The water in your tanks is most probably your biggest asset, but by doing 50% plus water changes and dumping it, you are going back to square one continually. And you are fighting a losing battle with rubbish water of dubious quality.
Think recycle. Reuse. I am interested in what you may come up with.