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Buy quality components. Buy them one at a time if you must. It is
certainly cheaper in the long run. The Wal-Mart complete setups are a place to start but, the tank is not that great quality, the stands are terrible (but they don't fall ;-), and you will find the pumps, heaters, etc. to be the very minimum level of quality - just enough to keep from killing fish regularly. Find a couple of local fish stores near where you live. Buy a tank and stand there. Buy a really good quality tank and stand first because once you have it you never replace it. You will spend many hours a week looking at it so, make sure it is the best quality you can afford (within reason). I recently purchased a 50 gallon tank for $100. I really like the extra height and depth of these tanks. A 24 inch tall "show" tank has a lot of visual appeal for a main living area. The stands run ~$120 to $150 for an enclosed model (same tank size). Now, once you recover from that financial outlay, get a good filter and heater. The Emperor 400 from Marineland is solid starting point and runs $40 from http://www.bigalsonline.com, add a Rena heater ~$20 from the same place, some dechlorinator, and fish food you are at ~$80 with shipping. I like to add a small Tetra DeepWater air pump with a rectangular air stone (1inch by 6 inch) for those tiny bubbles and the visual appeal and you're done at about $100. Now, add the water and let the tank sit about week to cycle through any "bloom" that might occur. Now you're ready to add a few fish (not more then 4) to get the tank started right. I would suggest viewing all the fish at several pet stores at least once a week for a couple of weeks before you buy some. Find fish that are appealing to you and, try to avoid the "Noah's Ark" syndrome with one or two from each species. Right now I'm into large groups of schooling Tetra's myself and find their behavior to be much different in large groups versus isolation in an ocean of many. If you mix fish, make sure they are compatible (i.e. you are not buying expensive feeder fish for an aggressive predator in the tank - like Barbs and Neon Tetra's or similar bad combinations). wrote in message om... Hello, I currently live in Phoenix, AZ and I was wondering if anyone had any advice about stores locally that have friendly service, knowledge, and good prices. Please let me know if anyone has had any good experiences here in the area. Or if you are looking to sell an old tank, I would be interested. Thank you, Matt |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Stores near the Monterey, California area | Clay Blankenship | General | 0 | September 20th 03 07:25 AM |