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Flowerring aquaria plants for goldfish



 
 
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Old May 11th 06, 07:32 AM posted to rec.aquaria.freshwater.goldfish
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Default Flowerring aquaria plants for goldfish

Take evreything with a grain of salt!

I have koi, golfish, comets, minnows, tetras, a cichlid, dainos, and
guppies all in a big (700 gal) pond with tons of plants, and I haven't
had them all eaten! Actually, they're growing so fast I'm having to
throw them out on my compost heap in handfulls. I used to try dividing
them, but they grew so fast that just wasn't cutting it.

Everyone said my koi and goldfish would destroy my plants, and I've
found that to be completely incorrect. I also have bettas, and while
they're pretty, they haven't a goldfish's charm. Plants and fish do
just fine together, as long as you have enough plants to keep everyone
busy.

You're wise to have faith in the fish - a few million years of
evolution have left fish - especially goldfish - with plenty of
gumption. 10L is fine if you keep the water clean. A little
amonia/nitrate/nitrite/ph test kit - 20$ US - will tell you if you need
to change the water, though you can tell just by looking at it most
likely. Also, don't go crazy with chemicals - regular 1/2 water changes
should be enough to keep things happy.

I started with anachris, cambomba, and elodea - common cheap plants at
the local fish store. It's been fine - the fich munch sometimes, but
they certainltly haven't destroyed the plants. What they did destroy,
now that I think of it, was the peace lily plant. The mondo grass
hasn't held up to the pond algae very well, but it didn't get eaten, it
just dies once the algae got going on it.



Consider adding four or five neon tetras to you goldfish tank -
they're tiny, and since they swim at the bottom of the tank, they'll be
a fun contrast to the slow mid-water goldies. when I first started, all
I could afford were dollar-store glass coffee pots. I had a golfish or
tetra or a few mini platys or neons in each one - I had 6 of them in
my room. It was great! They were all different, and you know a coffe
pot is a LOT less than 10 gal.

When I got bored of the water changes I just dumped 'em in the pond,
and everybody's doing great.I think fish aren't anywhere near as
delicate as hobbyosts woud have us think. Fish have lived in big
cold/warm/dirty/murky ponds for a zillion years - they can put up with
a surprising amount.

Have FUN!

No big deal. Fish + plants + clean water = happy aquarium.

 




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