Yarkii
Fish Fanatic
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2017
- Messages
- 159
- Reaction score
- 2
Hello all.
I was recently given someone else's goldfish tank (without the fish or water). It was just a little 20L tank and came with the filter & filter media, light, gravel & an ornament. I didn't know then that it was way too small for goldfish, and I didn't know about cycling tanks. (I can hear you shuddering already. I feel so guilty.)
My local aquarium gave me loads and loads of what I now believe to be extremely bad advice. This included saying we could have three goldfish in there. We didn't, but I now realise that we shouldn't have even had one (we had two for about a week). We didn't cycle the tank, but the API '5 in 1' Test Strip readings were consistently NO3 0-20, NO2 0-0.5, pH 6.5, KH 40, GH >=180. We were given the impression by the LFS that that meant it was already cycled.
Long and sad story short, three fish met their sad ends in that tank, within a matter of a couple of months. I've learnt just how bad that LFS is, and won't be going there ever again. I do however want to use this tank as a quarantine tank for a much larger new tank (220L) that is currently one week into a fishless cycle. However, I'm rather scared to use this tank for a QT, in case there are parasites in there that killed the previous fish.
I don't know whether to throw out the gravel & filter media, clean out the glass tank & the filter, purchase new gravel & filter media (or maybe a whole new filter) and start cycling it as a brand new tank, or whether there is some way to confidently and thoroughly treat it for all possible parasites, then cycle it again (do you do that?), before safely setting it up as a QT for the bigger tank. I'd like to have as similar as possible an environment in both tanks, so I'm leaning towards throwing everything out and starting from scratch, but as you've realised by now I know extremely little about fish keeping, and just don't know how to decide what to do.
I don't know what the three fish died of, but they all slowed down in their activity for a number of days, and swam rather oddly towards the end. The last poor fish kept getting stuck in the plants, then when I got him free he'd be pushed around by the flow of the filter (it wasn't that strong). He'd sometimes try to swim straight up but fall vertically backwards. He'd sometimes move forwards but twirl around and around like he was on a fast-rotating spit. Sometimes he'd hang around the bottom of the tank, and sometimes (not often) he'd float a little lop-sided. In the last two days he most floated. I couldn't see any unusual colorings or spots or growths or bulges or anything else like that on any of the fish, to my uneducated eye. They all ate the floating fish flakes that the LFS sold me when I bought the first goldfish.
I feel extremely guilty sharing this information on here. I tried to look after these fish, and trusted the LFS, but now know we should never, ever have had goldfish in that tiny little tank.
Sent from my SM-G900I using Tapatalk
I was recently given someone else's goldfish tank (without the fish or water). It was just a little 20L tank and came with the filter & filter media, light, gravel & an ornament. I didn't know then that it was way too small for goldfish, and I didn't know about cycling tanks. (I can hear you shuddering already. I feel so guilty.)
My local aquarium gave me loads and loads of what I now believe to be extremely bad advice. This included saying we could have three goldfish in there. We didn't, but I now realise that we shouldn't have even had one (we had two for about a week). We didn't cycle the tank, but the API '5 in 1' Test Strip readings were consistently NO3 0-20, NO2 0-0.5, pH 6.5, KH 40, GH >=180. We were given the impression by the LFS that that meant it was already cycled.
Long and sad story short, three fish met their sad ends in that tank, within a matter of a couple of months. I've learnt just how bad that LFS is, and won't be going there ever again. I do however want to use this tank as a quarantine tank for a much larger new tank (220L) that is currently one week into a fishless cycle. However, I'm rather scared to use this tank for a QT, in case there are parasites in there that killed the previous fish.
I don't know whether to throw out the gravel & filter media, clean out the glass tank & the filter, purchase new gravel & filter media (or maybe a whole new filter) and start cycling it as a brand new tank, or whether there is some way to confidently and thoroughly treat it for all possible parasites, then cycle it again (do you do that?), before safely setting it up as a QT for the bigger tank. I'd like to have as similar as possible an environment in both tanks, so I'm leaning towards throwing everything out and starting from scratch, but as you've realised by now I know extremely little about fish keeping, and just don't know how to decide what to do.
I don't know what the three fish died of, but they all slowed down in their activity for a number of days, and swam rather oddly towards the end. The last poor fish kept getting stuck in the plants, then when I got him free he'd be pushed around by the flow of the filter (it wasn't that strong). He'd sometimes try to swim straight up but fall vertically backwards. He'd sometimes move forwards but twirl around and around like he was on a fast-rotating spit. Sometimes he'd hang around the bottom of the tank, and sometimes (not often) he'd float a little lop-sided. In the last two days he most floated. I couldn't see any unusual colorings or spots or growths or bulges or anything else like that on any of the fish, to my uneducated eye. They all ate the floating fish flakes that the LFS sold me when I bought the first goldfish.
I feel extremely guilty sharing this information on here. I tried to look after these fish, and trusted the LFS, but now know we should never, ever have had goldfish in that tiny little tank.
Sent from my SM-G900I using Tapatalk