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Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 23rd 06, 01:56 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
El Roberto
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Posts: 20
Default Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!

Right, after massacring 2 goldfish, 3 fantails and a black moor during my
abortive first attempts at amateur fishkeeping, I've done all my homework
and am now pretty much ready to start over again.

I'm using a 21 litre tank, and have been trying to cycle it for 2 weeks now
by adding cycling bacteria, a plant, and putting food in there to rot and
produce ammonia. Thus far there are no nitrites at all, some nitrate (which
I assume is a good thing, as it shows the bacteria are working), although I
don't have an ammonia test kit.

Anyhoo, I'm going to be patient and take it easy, and am probably going to
buy a fish tomorrow, most likely something small that won't grow huge and
will be happy in a relatively small tank. So the questions I have a

a) Any suggestions for a good starter freshwater fish that is pretty durable
and won't grow to a huge size? I want something quite pretty so am prepared
to pay a bit over the usual bog-standard prices....

b) I'm considering buying a heater and getting some tetras or tropical fish:
is this advisable for my first proper tank? I was trying to think of the
extra hassles that heated tanks would bring, but can't really think of any.
What are the pros and cons? I assume you can add cold water during 10% water
changes....

Any ideas would be much appreciated - determined to get it right this time!

R


  #2  
Old October 23rd 06, 03:13 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
JamesG
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Posts: 2
Default Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!


El Roberto wrote:
Right, after massacring 2 goldfish, 3 fantails and a black moor during my
abortive first attempts at amateur fishkeeping, I've done all my homework
and am now pretty much ready to start over again.

I'm using a 21 litre tank, and have been trying to cycle it for 2 weeks now
by adding cycling bacteria, a plant, and putting food in there to rot and
produce ammonia. Thus far there are no nitrites at all, some nitrate (which
I assume is a good thing, as it shows the bacteria are working), although I
don't have an ammonia test kit.

Anyhoo, I'm going to be patient and take it easy, and am probably going to
buy a fish tomorrow, most likely something small that won't grow huge and
will be happy in a relatively small tank. So the questions I have a

a) Any suggestions for a good starter freshwater fish that is pretty durable
and won't grow to a huge size? I want something quite pretty so am prepared
to pay a bit over the usual bog-standard prices....

b) I'm considering buying a heater and getting some tetras or tropical fish:
is this advisable for my first proper tank? I was trying to think of the
extra hassles that heated tanks would bring, but can't really think of any.
What are the pros and cons? I assume you can add cold water during 10% water
changes....

Any ideas would be much appreciated - determined to get it right this time!

R


Here are some fish that I have had that have been good survivors for
me:
White Clouds, Lemon Tetras, Buenos Aires Tetras, Kuhli Loach (my
favorite and a good bottom feeder), Glowlight Tetra, Beacon Tetra,
Danios. I have also had decent results with Neons.

Good Luck,
James

  #3  
Old October 23rd 06, 03:14 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
carlrs
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Posts: 227
Default Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!


El Roberto wrote:
Right, after massacring 2 goldfish, 3 fantails and a black moor during my
abortive first attempts at amateur fishkeeping, I've done all my homework
and am now pretty much ready to start over again.

I'm using a 21 litre tank, and have been trying to cycle it for 2 weeks now
by adding cycling bacteria, a plant, and putting food in there to rot and
produce ammonia. Thus far there are no nitrites at all, some nitrate (which
I assume is a good thing, as it shows the bacteria are working), although I
don't have an ammonia test kit.

Anyhoo, I'm going to be patient and take it easy, and am probably going to
buy a fish tomorrow, most likely something small that won't grow huge and
will be happy in a relatively small tank. So the questions I have a

a) Any suggestions for a good starter freshwater fish that is pretty durable
and won't grow to a huge size? I want something quite pretty so am prepared
to pay a bit over the usual bog-standard prices....

b) I'm considering buying a heater and getting some tetras or tropical fish:
is this advisable for my first proper tank? I was trying to think of the
extra hassles that heated tanks would bring, but can't really think of any.
What are the pros and cons? I assume you can add cold water during 10% water
changes....

Any ideas would be much appreciated - determined to get it right this time!

R


Glad to hear you are giving it a try again and that you are taking it
slow.
You have a rather small aquarium to allow for much variety of fish
selection.
I like dwarf gouramis as a pretty fish that do well in a small
aquarium, but even these fish really do better in a 35 liter aquarium
or larger.
I would stay with tetras, danios , white clouds, rasboras, maybe male
livebears such as platties.
My first aquarium over 35 years ago was about your size and consisted
of similar fish. I had a heater too and with help from my LFS did OK
(but I certainly had my lessons).
I would still invest in an ammonia, KH, and pH test kit to keep the
guessing down.
As for the cold water in a 10% change, it depends how cold. If it is
more than 5 C, I would consider add warm water to it, but this is just
an opinion based on not wanting to add any artificial stress to my
fish.

Good Luck,
Carl

  #4  
Old October 23rd 06, 04:48 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
Larry Blanchard
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Posts: 87
Default Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!

El Roberto wrote:

I'm using a 21 litre tank,


I may have missed where you're from, but the 21 liters implies you're not from
the U.S. :-). Here, a 10 gallon (41 liters?) is pretty much the standard
starter tank, and a lot of folks on this group will tell you that's too
small.


a) Any suggestions for a good starter freshwater fish that is pretty durable
and won't grow to a huge size? I want something quite pretty so am prepared
to pay a bit over the usual bog-standard prices....


About the only thing I'd put in a 5 gallon tank is a betta or a half dozen
white clouds or neons. BTW, in spite of common beliefs, a betta will greatly
appreciate a heated tank. But it's hard to get a decent heater for your
small tank. The white clouds would be your best bet - no heater needed if
the tank is in a heated room.

If you want, you could plant a small cryptocoryne. The white clouds would
look great swimming in and out among the leaves.

--
It's turtles, all the way down
  #5  
Old October 23rd 06, 05:40 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
[email protected]
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Posts: 20
Default Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!

On Mon, 23 Oct 2006 08:48:37 -0700, Larry Blanchard
wrote:

But it's hard to get a decent heater for your
small tank.


6", 25W, unbreakable heaters are available. The trouble is they cost
more than the tank!

Steve

--
Steve Wolstenholme Neural Planner Software

EasyNN-plus. The easy way to build neural networks.
http://www.easynn.com
  #7  
Old October 24th 06, 04:58 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 20
Default Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!

On Tue, 24 Oct 2006 08:12:34 -0700, Larry Blanchard
wrote:

wrote:

On Mon, 23 Oct 2006 08:48:37 -0700, Larry Blanchard
wrote:

But it's hard to get a decent heater for your
small tank.


6", 25W, unbreakable heaters are available. The trouble is they cost
more than the tank!

And if they stick on, they can overheat a 5 gallon tank in short order!


Yes, I know that but, in my experience, 25W heaters don't stick. The
contacts don't suffer from too many melting sparks. The small,
unbreakable ones are electronic so even less likely to stick.


Despite the "common wisdom" that specifies 5wpg, I put 2-3wpg in my tanks.
They seem quite adequate and give me a bigger safety margin if they stick in
the on position, which I understand is the most common failure mode.


I agree, in fact in a warm room I have a 100 gallon tank with just a
100W heater. If that stuck on it wouldn't even be noticed.


And a 10-15 watt heater for a 5 gallon tank is not, AFAIK, available. There
is a tiny permanently on heater but it gives a water temperature related to
room temperature. If you set your thermostat down at night, as we do, the
tank temperature goes down as well.


The above 100 gallon tank will retain its temperature for hours so
even if it was switched off at night I doubt it would drop more than a
few degrees.

Steve

--
Steve Wolstenholme Neural Planner Software

EasyNN-plus. The easy way to build neural networks.
http://www.easynn.com
  #9  
Old October 26th 06, 05:04 PM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
Marco Schwarz
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Posts: 89
Default Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!

Hi..

[...21 litre tank...]

1: In my mind almost too small for the most - even dwarf -
fish species..

2: Please try to avoid hectic wanderers like some rasbora,
brachydanio..

3: Add some MTS. Snails are able to transform dead food,
plants or fish into excellent nitrifying bacteria food..

4: What's about lightening and water parameters..?

a) Any suggestions for a good starter freshwater fish that
is pretty durable and won't grow to a huge size? I want
something quite pretty so am prepared to pay a bit over
the usual bog-standard prices....


5: Some tiny colourfull killi fish?

b) I'm considering buying a heater and getting some tetras
or tropical fish: is this advisable for my first proper
tank?


6: Yes. In the 60s were 5W and 10W permanent heaters and
low flow filters available for smaller tanks. Missed them
later in the pet fish stores but they staged a comeback
in the *Nano* world..

7: Would recommend a 10W thermostat heater and a filter with
maximum 60 l/h (15 g/h) output..

I was trying to think of the extra hassles that
heated tanks would bring, but can't really think of any.
What are the pros and cons?


8: I suppose for a beginner a tropical tank were easier to
set up and to manage. A lot of colourful tropical _dwarf_
fish are available.

I assume you can add cold
water during 10% water changes....


9: Well, where I come from tap water is drinking water so
I'm used to recommend water changes of 30-60%. But see no
problem to warm treated tap water up to room temperature in
a bucket or so, or you might even stick a small thermostat
heater in that bucket. Feel challenged to be
creative..! :-)

Any ideas would be much appreciated - determined to get it
right this time!


Have fun and enjoy..!

--
cu
Marco


  #10  
Old October 30th 06, 04:10 AM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc
swarvegorilla
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Posts: 578
Default Freshwater / Tropical fish dilemma!


"El Roberto" wrote in message
...
Right, after massacring 2 goldfish, 3 fantails and a black moor during my
abortive first attempts at amateur fishkeeping, I've done all my homework
and am now pretty much ready to start over again.

I'm using a 21 litre tank, and have been trying to cycle it for 2 weeks
now by adding cycling bacteria, a plant, and putting food in there to rot
and produce ammonia. Thus far there are no nitrites at all, some nitrate
(which I assume is a good thing, as it shows the bacteria are working),
although I don't have an ammonia test kit.

Anyhoo, I'm going to be patient and take it easy, and am probably going to
buy a fish tomorrow, most likely something small that won't grow huge and
will be happy in a relatively small tank. So the questions I have a

a) Any suggestions for a good starter freshwater fish that is pretty
durable and won't grow to a huge size? I want something quite pretty so am
prepared to pay a bit over the usual bog-standard prices....

b) I'm considering buying a heater and getting some tetras or tropical
fish: is this advisable for my first proper tank? I was trying to think of
the extra hassles that heated tanks would bring, but can't really think of
any. What are the pros and cons? I assume you can add cold water during
10% water changes....

Any ideas would be much appreciated - determined to get it right this
time!

R



your ammonia is prob thru the roof
if nitrites haven't showed up and then fallen away then you are still weeks
away
get the store to check your water for ammonia
or be ready to do some serious water changes


 




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