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#1 (permalink) | ||||
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Aquarium Advice Freak
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55 gallon makeover day! Full tank shot, 11/11/07
I've been planning to move my 55 gallon from a side room to the living room for some time now (was meaning to do it this summer
To start with, here's the tank as it appears this week (click for larger images): And here's some data on the tank: Inhabitants: Quote:
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1. Provide a happy healthy environment for the inhabitants. 2. Have a reasonably attractive tank with natural materials (not a showstopper, but nice enough to be in the living room) 3. Have a low maintenance tank. I don't want to have to trim or replant frequently, and I'd really like to only think about fertilizers at the weekly water change (which is a habit I'm slipping into anyway). Some general ideas of what I might do: 1. Definitely change the substrate. Maybe to Eco-complete, which I'm liking in my betta tank, or something similar. It will have to be loach-friendly, and hopefully nutrient-rich, if that helps me not have to fertilize much. 2. More driftwood, probably almost wall-to-wall. This is also for the loaches benefit (and the pleco) 3. Probably lower the lighting. I don't have very bad algae problems now, despite being at a level where I "should" have CO2 or be in trouble. But if I can change the lights to 50/50 bulbs, say, and still have plants that I like, that would be ideal in terms of the low-tech/low-maintenance goal. 4. Maybe get rid of the Hygro. They're the fast growers in the tank, and they may be sucking up more nutrients than I'm providing. When I put them in, the idea was they would be good cover to make the tetras comfortable, but oddly enough they seem to hunker down around the driftwood instead. For taller plants, I could go with some things like Anubias congensis or Crypt. retrospiralis maybe. I'm currently soaking a bunch of driftwood, and when I get a chance, I'll try photographing it in different configurations. Any comments are welcome, particularly any good plants with the lower light (and hard water btw). |
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#2 (permalink) |
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Aquarium Advice Freak
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Ok, here are some shots of the driftwood that's soaking (click on pics to view larger)
First, just the five pieces laying out: And a few different arrangements (the masking tape is the footprint of the tank): I forgot to mention, I will also probably put a powerhead in the tank down low to keep water moving throough the driftwood, and to give some more high-flow areas for the filter shrimp. |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Aquarium Advice Freak
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Well, I've set a deadline for myself to get this done by the first weekend in November. The driftwood has been soaking for almost a month now with several changes of water, so that's getting ready. I decided to order Aquariumplants.com substrate. Here are a couple pics:
Dry: ![]() Wet: ![]() From reading around on this stuff, I gather it doesn't have nutrients in it but it holds them well, so I have some Flourish root tabs I'll put under it. I'm also going to leave some of the old gravel and mulm in the bottom, staying under the aquarium frame so it won't be visible. I spent a lot of time rinsing this stuff, about an hour and a half. Hope I got it clean enough! I also hear this is fairly light until it spends some time absorbing water, so I hope the pleco doesn't end up scattering it everywhere. I realized I'm going to need a Python extension for the new location -- glad I caught that before the move! I've got a big order of Anubias from aquabid on its way, should get here tomorrow. It's from Asia, hope it makes it in good shape (I figure Anubias is probably about as tough in shipping as I could hope for...) And I have to decide on the big plant order. How many Crypt balansae would make a good background for say 1/2-2/3 of the tank? Maybe 20-30? I also want to get a lotus, and I'm leaning to having some stem plants floating. I have some freebie Rotala rotundifolia floating and my dwarf platies and pearl gourami really like it! If it can survive this way, then I can have stem plants and still have them be low maintenance. |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Aquarium Advice Addict
Community Mentor
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Jamestown, RI
Posts: 1,564
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The lotus should work well. I have a somewhat similar setup, 2x96 watts with 50:50 bulbs on a 55 and I am growing a variety of Crypts, a compacta sword, a red tiger lotus and Nymphoides sp 'Taiwan'. Also Java moss, a nice broad leaf hygro that grows slowly, Anubias, Hemianthus micranthemoides as carpet (was established under higher light) and Lobelia cardinalis. The salicifolia is beautiful but grows like mad, I got rid of mine for that reason. Hydrocotyl leucocephala would make a nice floating/rooted stem plant, too.
The driftwood you have looks fantastic, can't wait to see how the setup progresses, and how you like the new substrate. |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Aquarium Advice Freak
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Thanks, newfound. I'm the one you just sent the hydrocotyle and Nymphoides 'Taiwan' to (thanks!), so you've caught on to my plan exactly!
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#9 (permalink) |
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Aquarium Advice Addict
Community Mentor
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Jamestown, RI
Posts: 1,564
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Ha, I forget who I send stuff to....it's hard to connect the name on the shipping box with the screen name sometimes. The Taiwan will come back fast, but the leaves don't last long anyway, a week maybe, but it'll grow a new leaf about every week to replace the lost one. kind of a pain to keep clipping the tattered leaves but on the other hand the plant doesn't try and take over the whole tank surface like some other floaters do.
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#10 (permalink) |
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Aquarium Advice Addict
Community Mentor
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I have a 55g with the same amount of light, so I am anxious to see your tanks transformation!
The AP.com substrate looks really nice. I thought about using it in my 20g, but shipping was way too much! Not worth it IMO. Makes me a little sad.... I love the driftwood...I can tell already that the tank is gonna look great!
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~Kristin~ 5 planted tanks: 55g, 40g, 29g, 20g, 5.5g; 10g Shell Dwelling Cichlid tank, 5.5g fry tank My links to pics: My 40g breeder log, My tanks blog |
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