View Full Version : question a bout well water
steveh28
February 13th 04, 05:23 PM
my dad's wife is a first grade teacher and has an aquarium in her
classroom (29 gal.) and has about 6 just tropical fish in it. the
main problem is that the school is in a town that still does not have
city water, all the water for the whole town comes out of a well. she
has had problems keeping new fish alive, i assume from the well
water?? i know it probably has a case of old tank syndrome, but i am
in the process of teaching her how to care for the tank better with
water changes and all. once she gets the hang of it, i am going to
try to convince her that cichlids are the way to go. so are there any
suggestions on how to make the well water more suitable for any fish,
and more specifically cichlids if she goes that route?
steveh28
February 13th 04, 05:45 PM
On Fri, 13 Feb 2004 12:23:34 -0500, steveh28
> wrote:
>my dad's wife is a first grade teacher and has an aquarium in her
>classroom (29 gal.) and has about 6 just tropical fish in it. the
>main problem is that the school is in a town that still does not have
>city water, all the water for the whole town comes out of a well. she
>has had problems keeping new fish alive, i assume from the well
>water?? i know it probably has a case of old tank syndrome, but i am
>in the process of teaching her how to care for the tank better with
>water changes and all. once she gets the hang of it, i am going to
>try to convince her that cichlids are the way to go. so are there any
>suggestions on how to make the well water more suitable for any fish,
>and more specifically cichlids if she goes that route?
>
by the way, i wasnt gonna suggest anything big, mabye shell dwellers
and other peacful small cichlids. a calvus or two perhaps?? not
sure. i will take suggestions on that too.
Robert MacCara
February 13th 04, 07:58 PM
On Fri, 13 Feb 2004 12:45:22 -0500, steveh28 wrote:
> On Fri, 13 Feb 2004 12:23:34 -0500, steveh28 >
> wrote:
>
>>my dad's wife is a first grade teacher and has an aquarium in her
>>classroom (29 gal.) and has about 6 just tropical fish in it. the main
>>problem is that the school is in a town that still does not have city
>>water, all the water for the whole town comes out of a well. she has had
>>problems keeping new fish alive, i assume from the well water?? i know
>>it probably has a case of old tank syndrome, but i am in the process of
>>teaching her how to care for the tank better with water changes and all.
>>once she gets the hang of it, i am going to try to convince her that
>>cichlids are the way to go. so are there any suggestions on how to make
>>the well water more suitable for any fish, and more specifically cichlids
>>if she goes that route?
>>
I live in the "suburbs" (that's a nice way of saying the city has
expanded to the county line) of Halifax, Nova Scotia and have a well. I
use my water straight from the tap. PH is 7.6 I've just setup a new tank
for some shell dwellers with crushed coral sand and the PH in that tank is
8.0 My other cichlids thrive in the well water with weekly 20% water
changes.
Rob
Cichlidiot
February 15th 04, 01:26 AM
steveh28 > wrote:
> my dad's wife is a first grade teacher and has an aquarium in her
> classroom (29 gal.) and has about 6 just tropical fish in it. the
> main problem is that the school is in a town that still does not have
> city water, all the water for the whole town comes out of a well. she
> has had problems keeping new fish alive, i assume from the well
> water?? i know it probably has a case of old tank syndrome, but i am
> in the process of teaching her how to care for the tank better with
> water changes and all. once she gets the hang of it, i am going to
> try to convince her that cichlids are the way to go. so are there any
> suggestions on how to make the well water more suitable for any fish,
> and more specifically cichlids if she goes that route?
I think in order for anyone to make anything more than general
recommendations, we need to know more about the well water. Can you test
it for pH, GH, KH, ammonia, nitrite and nitrate? With those values, much
better advice can be given. Now for my general comment. Well water is not
necessarily bad, it can be used just fine for tanks, but it all depends on
those parameters.
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