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Active, colorful and peaceful...



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 28th 05, 02:11 AM
teri
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Default Active, colorful and peaceful...

That is my goal for my new 20G tank. So far I have the two platys
that came from the 3 gallon tank. Since this is my first foray into
fishkeeping I also want easy and hardy guys, preferably on the smaller
side. After a lot of reading I am considering some combination of the
following:

1 or 2 more platys - I like all the colors they come in, but they do
seem to be kind of lazy and spend a lot
of time just sitting around,
golden barbs
cherry barbs
cardinal tetras
or possibly...
dwarf neon rainbows
harlequin rasboras.

Any suggestions on a good combination choosing from that list?
And which would be best to add first?
Teri
  #2  
Old June 28th 05, 02:49 AM
Steve
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Default

teri wrote:
That is my goal for my new 20G tank. So far I have the two platys
that came from the 3 gallon tank. Since this is my first foray into
fishkeeping I also want easy and hardy guys, preferably on the smaller
side. After a lot of reading I am considering some combination of the
following:

1 or 2 more platys - I like all the colors they come in, but they do
seem to be kind of lazy and spend a lot
of time just sitting around,
golden barbs
cherry barbs
cardinal tetras
or possibly...
dwarf neon rainbows
harlequin rasboras.

Any suggestions on a good combination choosing from that list?
And which would be best to add first?
Teri

Hi,
I've really enjoyed cherry barbs, harlequins and dwarf neon rainbowfish.
Suggestion: get a school of 5, 6 of one of the smaller types of fish
(harlequins or cherry barbs) and see how things go.

Also, is the aquarium pretty well cycled? Perhaps get 2 or 3 cherry
barbs now, and 3 or 4 more in 3-4 weeks?

I think the golden barbs may be more like rosy barbs, active and on the
large side. Could be tough, though. As to cardinals, I had no success
with them the last time I tried, about 1974!

I currently do have some "dwarf" neon rainbow fish, and they're not that
small, perhaps 2.5 to 3 inches. A school of 3 or 4 would be nice in a 20
gallon. Again, build up the population slowly if possible.

I'm a bit envious that you're setting up a new aquarium. You're
considering some very nice fish; good luck!
Steve
  #3  
Old June 28th 05, 04:54 AM
Jim Anderson
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Default

In article ,
says...

teri wrote:
That is my goal for my new 20G tank. So far I have the two platys
that came from the 3 gallon tank. Since this is my first foray into
fishkeeping I also want easy and hardy guys, preferably on the smaller
side. After a lot of reading I am considering some combination of the
following:

1 or 2 more platys - I like all the colors they come in, but they do
seem to be kind of lazy and spend a lot
of time just sitting around,
golden barbs
cherry barbs
cardinal tetras
or possibly...
dwarf neon rainbows
harlequin rasboras.

Any suggestions on a good combination choosing from that list?
And which would be best to add first?
Teri

Hi,
I've really enjoyed cherry barbs, harlequins and dwarf neon rainbowfish.
Suggestion: get a school of 5, 6 of one of the smaller types of fish
(harlequins or cherry barbs) and see how things go.

Also, is the aquarium pretty well cycled? Perhaps get 2 or 3 cherry
barbs now, and 3 or 4 more in 3-4 weeks?

I think the golden barbs may be more like rosy barbs, active and on the
large side. Could be tough, though. As to cardinals, I had no success
with them the last time I tried, about 1974!

I currently do have some "dwarf" neon rainbow fish, and they're not that
small, perhaps 2.5 to 3 inches. A school of 3 or 4 would be nice in a 20
gallon. Again, build up the population slowly if possible.

I'm a bit envious that you're setting up a new aquarium. You're
considering some very nice fish; good luck!
Steve


A 20Gal is way too small (IMHO) for Neon dwarf rainbows, my 6 are very
active swimmers and I saw some at the aquarium show at 4 inches (I think
they won a ribbon for bigger then they should be).

Cardinal Tetras can be kinda testy when mating and require very soft
acidic water to do their best.

A good contrast fish for the Barbs listed would be Lemon Tetras, they
grow to about 2 inches and if kept properly, mine got very bright
yellow, if they are stressed they are the washed out lemonade color you
see in the LFS.

--
Jim Anderson
( 8(|) To email me just pull my_finger
  #4  
Old June 28th 05, 10:50 AM
Dick
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Default

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 01:11:42 GMT, teri wrote:

That is my goal for my new 20G tank. So far I have the two platys
that came from the 3 gallon tank. Since this is my first foray into
fishkeeping I also want easy and hardy guys, preferably on the smaller
side. After a lot of reading I am considering some combination of the
following:

1 or 2 more platys - I like all the colors they come in, but they do
seem to be kind of lazy and spend a lot
of time just sitting around,
golden barbs
cherry barbs
cardinal tetras
or possibly...
dwarf neon rainbows
harlequin rasboras.

Any suggestions on a good combination choosing from that list?
And which would be best to add first?
Teri


Congratulations on your new tank Teri.

I would caution you to not over stock and choose fish which will not
grow too large. In addition I would suggest you include in that mix
one or two scavengers. My 3 Juli Cory Catfish have been healthy and
are less than 2 inches in length, (closer to 1 inch). They are fun to
watch and stay mostly on the gravel.

dick
  #6  
Old June 29th 05, 02:47 AM
teri
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Default


I've really enjoyed cherry barbs, harlequins and dwarf neon rainbowfish.
Suggestion: get a school of 5, 6 of one of the smaller types of fish
(harlequins or cherry barbs) and see how things go.

Also, is the aquarium pretty well cycled? Perhaps get 2 or 3 cherry
barbs now, and 3 or 4 more in 3-4 weeks?

Thanks for the well wishes. I am filing everyone's suggestions and
thoughts.
I will see how the tank cycles for a couple of weeks. I took the blue
filter pad from my cycled penguin mini and put it in the extra space
in the penguin 100, and I am floating the biowheel from the mini in
the tank. So I guess I will know if that is successful over the next
week or so. If so I will then hit the store again.
Right now my thoughts are.... well, actually they change every 15
minutes on what I "think I will get". Leaning towards cherry barbs
and harlequins, but by the time I am done typing it may be something
else from that list. Then, once I get up to That Fish Place in
Lancaster, who knows what the heck will happen :-)
Teri
  #7  
Old June 29th 05, 03:49 AM
HCS
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Corys and cardinal tetras makes perfect match. If I were you, I'll keep 3
corys with 8 cardinals.


Dick wrote:

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 01:11:42 GMT, teri wrote:

That is my goal for my new 20G tank. So far I have the two platys
that came from the 3 gallon tank. Since this is my first foray into
fishkeeping I also want easy and hardy guys, preferably on the smaller
side. After a lot of reading I am considering some combination of the
following:

1 or 2 more platys - I like all the colors they come in, but they do
seem to be kind of lazy and spend a lot
of time just sitting around,
golden barbs
cherry barbs
cardinal tetras
or possibly...
dwarf neon rainbows
harlequin rasboras.

Any suggestions on a good combination choosing from that list?
And which would be best to add first?
Teri


Congratulations on your new tank Teri.

I would caution you to not over stock and choose fish which will not
grow too large. In addition I would suggest you include in that mix
one or two scavengers. My 3 Juli Cory Catfish have been healthy and
are less than 2 inches in length, (closer to 1 inch). They are fun to
watch and stay mostly on the gravel.

dick


  #9  
Old June 29th 05, 07:14 PM
Derek Benson
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Default

On Wed, 29 Jun 2005 04:31:17 -0500, Dick
wrote:

One caution about adding SAEs in a 20 gallon tank. They get big! I am
worried about mine in 29 and 75 gallon tanks. After only 2 years they
are now larger than my Clown Loaches and seem to be still growing. The
larger ones are over 5 inches and they live long lives. I bought a
total of 15 because I found them so attractive. They were only a
couple of inches in length 2 years ago. I agree with the sentiment,
they are fun fish, but they can become large.

dick


How many SAEs should one have at a minimum? I'm not thinking about how
much algae they can eat but if they are a fish which should be kept in
groups? Is 2 or 3 two few for them to do okay behaviourally or
socially?

-Derek
 




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