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I'm back :)
It's been a while!
I moved to Arizona with my wife, and subsisted for a whole year with one tank. ONE TANK! Sadly, that state of affairs is a-changing ;) I just finished setting up a 2.5 for my desk. I'd always wanted to do a fun tiny plant tank(sort of an aquatic bonsai project) and I finally felt up to it. A pic is at: http://www.emptiedout.com/2.5/ The following details are up there as well, reposted here because it's usenet and that's just how it should be ;) This is a 2.5 gallon tank, with a small heater, and Aquaclear power filter, and and a homemade hood with a 13W power compact fluorescent for lighting. The piece of driftwood is one I have had for years, most of that time in a box. I bought it imagining I would do something cool with it some day, and it seems I was right. :) I drilled a few holes in a spare piece of plexigless to make a base for it- the thing floats and never seems to waterlog so this was pretty much a necessity. Being the geek I am I used cable ties to secure it. The wood is tied with Java moss, a few small java ferns in the back, and anubias nana and barteri var coffeefolia. Upon much consideration, I decided the use a soil substrate. I mixed about 3 handfuls of topsoil, one handful of vermiculite, one handful of potting soil, half a handful of peat moss, and enough water to make a nice pasty mess. On top of that is small grain gravel bought in a local fish store. The tank is currently planted with rotala indica, an unidentified crypt species, an unidentified hygrophilia(I think) species, and echinodorus tenellus. I plan to add some dwarf hairgrass for accents as soon as I can find some locally. Current inhabitants are 10 snails to stir the substrate and eat detritus. Next week I will add one otocinclus affinis and one Amano shrimp for algae control. As for fish, I am currently thinking I will add a pair of sparkling gourami. Other contenders include a trio of featherfin rainbowfish or a pair or trio of dwarf puffers. If you have other suggestions for a small tank (aside from betta or paradisefish) feel free to contact me via email or reply to this post. I want something very small with personality. Also in the works, a new 20 gallon to house my rambunctious red phantom tetras. The school of them (10) feels out of place in my 55 now, and I want to go with some dwarf cichlids in that tank(most likely apistogramma cacatuides) and needed to free up some fishload ;) If this 2.5 goes well I will likely do soil in that tank as well. This time I am stopping at three tanks. Really. No, *really*. ~Empty |
I'm back :)
Empty wrote:
It's been a while! I moved to Arizona with my wife, and subsisted for a whole year with one tank. ONE TANK! Sadly, that state of affairs is a-changing ;) I just finished setting up a 2.5 for my desk. I'd always wanted to do a fun tiny plant tank(sort of an aquatic bonsai project) and I finally felt up to it. A pic is at: http://www.emptiedout.com/2.5/ The following details are up there as well, reposted here because it's usenet and that's just how it should be ;) This is a 2.5 gallon tank, with a small heater, and Aquaclear power filter, and and a homemade hood with a 13W power compact fluorescent for lighting. The piece of driftwood is one I have had for years, most of that time in a box. I bought it imagining I would do something cool with it some day, and it seems I was right. :) I drilled a few holes in a spare piece of plexigless to make a base for it- the thing floats and never seems to waterlog so this was pretty much a necessity. Being the geek I am I used cable ties to secure it. The wood is tied with Java moss, a few small java ferns in the back, and anubias nana and barteri var coffeefolia. Upon much consideration, I decided the use a soil substrate. I mixed about 3 handfuls of topsoil, one handful of vermiculite, one handful of potting soil, half a handful of peat moss, and enough water to make a nice pasty mess. On top of that is small grain gravel bought in a local fish store. The tank is currently planted with rotala indica, an unidentified crypt species, an unidentified hygrophilia(I think) species, and echinodorus tenellus. I plan to add some dwarf hairgrass for accents as soon as I can find some locally. Current inhabitants are 10 snails to stir the substrate and eat detritus. Next week I will add one otocinclus affinis and one Amano shrimp for algae control. As for fish, I am currently thinking I will add a pair of sparkling gourami. Other contenders include a trio of featherfin rainbowfish or a pair or trio of dwarf puffers. If you have other suggestions for a small tank (aside from betta or paradisefish) feel free to contact me via email or reply to this post. I want something very small with personality. Also in the works, a new 20 gallon to house my rambunctious red phantom tetras. The school of them (10) feels out of place in my 55 now, and I want to go with some dwarf cichlids in that tank(most likely apistogramma cacatuides) and needed to free up some fishload ;) If this 2.5 goes well I will likely do soil in that tank as well. This time I am stopping at three tanks. Really. No, *really*. ~Empty Looks like it's going to grow out beutifully. I'm amazed you didn't have trouble with the vermiculite floating. I made the mistake of trying to use soil with some vermiculite in my pond, and boy was it a mess. I have 15 watts of CF over my 2 gallon hex and it works very nicely for green plants - it's not quite enough for reds. I like your idea of sparkling gouramis. Other tiny fish that come to mind are Endler's livebearers, pygmy rasboras (Bororas maculata), or pygmy cories (C. pygmaeus). Gill has a tiny tank with some really unusual freshwater gobies but I haven't seen anything like that on this side of the pond. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
I'm back :)
Elaine T wrote:
Empty wrote: It's been a while! I moved to Arizona with my wife, and subsisted for a whole year with one tank. ONE TANK! Sadly, that state of affairs is a-changing ;) I just finished setting up a 2.5 for my desk. I'd always wanted to do a fun tiny plant tank(sort of an aquatic bonsai project) and I finally felt up to it. A pic is at: http://www.emptiedout.com/2.5/ The following details are up there as well, reposted here because it's usenet and that's just how it should be ;) This is a 2.5 gallon tank, with a small heater, and Aquaclear power filter, and and a homemade hood with a 13W power compact fluorescent for lighting. The piece of driftwood is one I have had for years, most of that time in a box. I bought it imagining I would do something cool with it some day, and it seems I was right. :) I drilled a few holes in a spare piece of plexigless to make a base for it- the thing floats and never seems to waterlog so this was pretty much a necessity. Being the geek I am I used cable ties to secure it. The wood is tied with Java moss, a few small java ferns in the back, and anubias nana and barteri var coffeefolia. Upon much consideration, I decided the use a soil substrate. I mixed about 3 handfuls of topsoil, one handful of vermiculite, one handful of potting soil, half a handful of peat moss, and enough water to make a nice pasty mess. On top of that is small grain gravel bought in a local fish store. The tank is currently planted with rotala indica, an unidentified crypt species, an unidentified hygrophilia(I think) species, and echinodorus tenellus. I plan to add some dwarf hairgrass for accents as soon as I can find some locally. Current inhabitants are 10 snails to stir the substrate and eat detritus. Next week I will add one otocinclus affinis and one Amano shrimp for algae control. As for fish, I am currently thinking I will add a pair of sparkling gourami. Other contenders include a trio of featherfin rainbowfish or a pair or trio of dwarf puffers. If you have other suggestions for a small tank (aside from betta or paradisefish) feel free to contact me via email or reply to this post. I want something very small with personality. Also in the works, a new 20 gallon to house my rambunctious red phantom tetras. The school of them (10) feels out of place in my 55 now, and I want to go with some dwarf cichlids in that tank(most likely apistogramma cacatuides) and needed to free up some fishload ;) If this 2.5 goes well I will likely do soil in that tank as well. This time I am stopping at three tanks. Really. No, *really*. ~Empty Looks like it's going to grow out beutifully. I'm amazed you didn't have trouble with the vermiculite floating. I made the mistake of trying to use soil with some vermiculite in my pond, and boy was it a mess. I have 15 watts of CF over my 2 gallon hex and it works very nicely for green plants - it's not quite enough for reds. I like your idea of sparkling gouramis. Other tiny fish that come to mind are Endler's livebearers, pygmy rasboras (Bororas maculata), or pygmy cories (C. pygmaeus). Gill has a tiny tank with some really unusual freshwater gobies but I haven't seen anything like that on this side of the pond. I've never seen the Peacock Gobies over here since buying the five (sadly now 4)....most places just look at me blankly if I ask about them :-( They are great little fish IMO and I'm just keeping an eye out and spare tank room just in case I find some again. The Gobies are currently living with 5 panda cories which I guess would put pay to any breeding. It looks like I have 2M and 2F so I think some research on breeding might be in order....Great fish if you can get them Gill BTW did a google on the Sparkling Gouramis and they look like great little fish - never seen them in the UK |
I'm back :)
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005 18:21:13 +0000, Elaine T wrote:
Looks like it's going to grow out beutifully. I'm amazed you didn't have trouble with the vermiculite floating. I made the mistake of trying to use soil with some vermiculite in my pond, and boy was it a mess. I have 15 watts of CF over my 2 gallon hex and it works very nicely for green plants - it's not quite enough for reds. The trick is to mix the vermiculite with water and kneed it until all the air is out of it. Once the soil layer is in, use a spray bottle to was off any slop on the sides of the tank/driftwood/etc. Then drop an inch of gravel in and plant it before you fill it. I planted with enough water so I had no open water unless I tilted the tank a little bit, and I periodically misted everything down. I like your idea of sparkling gouramis. Other tiny fish that come to mind are Endler's livebearers, pygmy rasboras (Bororas maculata), or pygmy cories (C. pygmaeus). I thought about these (and Celebese Rainbows too) but a) livebearers? Argh! Within a few months it will have .5 gallons of soil plants and wood, .5 of water, and 1.5 of fry! ;) The cories are awesome(I used to have them in a 30G hex with sparkling gouramis, featherfin rainbows, and dwarf puffers) but to me they are an accent and not a main attraction). Anyone that has not kept sparkling gouramis should, definitely. They are one of my favorite small fish. I think I will be going with them, if for no other reason than the fact that they are anabantoids and if something contaminates the water they can survive breathing surface air for a bit longer. Thanks for the advice :) ~Empty |
I'm back :)
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005 21:04:31 +0100, Gill Passman wrote:
I've never seen the Peacock Gobies over here since buying the five (sadly now 4)....most places just look at me blankly if I ask about them :-( They are great little fish IMO and I'm just keeping an eye out and spare tank room just in case I find some again. These guys? http://www.petfish.net/tater.htm Go he http://www.aquabid.com/cgi-bin/auction/search.cgi and search on "peacock". I just found 2 hits :) Great fish if you can get them I just may do that. Now that I realize you are in the UK I think aquabid may not be the best plan- international next day shipping is probably not cheap. ~Empty |
I'm back :)
Empty wrote:
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005 21:04:31 +0100, Gill Passman wrote: I've never seen the Peacock Gobies over here since buying the five (sadly now 4)....most places just look at me blankly if I ask about them :-( They are great little fish IMO and I'm just keeping an eye out and spare tank room just in case I find some again. These guys? http://www.petfish.net/tater.htm Go he http://www.aquabid.com/cgi-bin/auction/search.cgi and search on "peacock". I just found 2 hits :) Great fish if you can get them I just may do that. Now that I realize you are in the UK I think aquabid may not be the best plan- international next day shipping is probably not cheap. ~Empty Pretty much that's them although mine are more noticably orange rather than yellow. One thing I would disagree with on that site is them not being picky about food. Mine won't touch flake and live on frozen bloodworm, daphnia, brine shrimp and strangely enough the catfish pellets I feed the Pandas on. I think my best bet will be to try and breed the ones I've got unless I find some locally - did get a hit on somewhere around 100 miles away which might be worth considering. Good luck in your choice of fish - let us know what you eventually buy Gill |
I'm back :)
On Wed, 26 Oct 2005 14:12:54 +0100, Gill Passman wrote:
I think my best bet will be to try and breed the ones I've got unless I find some locally - did get a hit on somewhere around 100 miles away which might be worth considering. Good luck in your choice of fish - let us know what you eventually buy Thatfishplace.com has 'em too. They seem really cool, and I have always liked gudgeons in general. Hrmm... Thanks for the heads up- I may get some for my 55G community. ~Empty |
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