![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have always wanted to try an aquarium with live plants, but fear has
stopped me! I would like to start out with a 10 gal. tank to see how it goes. I have an economy incandescent hood with 2 all-glass 6500k 10 wt. flourescent bulbs to use that a guy in a LSF assured me would be adequate for most freshwater plants if left on for 12 hours daily. All-glass advertises that they are suitable for aquarium plants, as well. Since this is my first attempt, I have a few questions I am hoping somebody can answer: What is the best thing to use for substrate? I have read that Flourite is good. Would I need to supplement with plant food periodically, and if so, does anybody have a recommendation? Also, I have read that it is not necessary nor is it advisable to use airstones in the tank as they drive off much-needed CO2 from the water - do you agree with that? Lastly, is it necessary to get some sort of CO2 generator, as well, or can I get by with out one? BTW, the PH of my water is around 7.5 out of a well. Thanks for any and all advice. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave W. wrote:
I have always wanted to try an aquarium with live plants, but fear has stopped me! I would like to start out with a 10 gal. tank to see how it goes. I have an economy incandescent hood with 2 all-glass 6500k 10 wt. flourescent bulbs to use that a guy in a LSF assured me would be adequate for most freshwater plants if left on for 12 hours daily. All-glass advertises that they are suitable for aquarium plants, as well. Since this is my first attempt, I have a few questions I am hoping somebody can answer: What is the best thing to use for substrate? I have read that Flourite is good. Would I need to supplement with plant food periodically, and if so, does anybody have a recommendation? Also, I have read that it is not necessary nor is it advisable to use airstones in the tank as they drive off much-needed CO2 from the water - do you agree with that? Lastly, is it necessary to get some sort of CO2 generator, as well, or can I get by with out one? BTW, the PH of my water is around 7.5 out of a well. Thanks for any and all advice. Lots of good stuff here. http://faq.thekrib.com/plant.html However, it was written before compact fluorescent lighting and flourite substrates. Don't let fear stop you. Plants pretty much grow on their own with enough light, fertlizer and CO2. Speaking of light, your lighting is what is considered "low" in the planted tank world. I guess your LFS guy hasn't actually tried to run a 10 gallon planted tank. Small tanks require considerably more lighting than the 2-3 watt/gallon formula suggests. Also little CF bulbs like the all-glass ones or hardware store spiral compact bulbs don't put out as much light as long, straight bulbs. I ran a 5 gallon tank for a while on 28 watts of 5500K spiral compact bulbs and it was just about right. Since you have low lighting, start with cryptocorynes (often called crypts), java fern, and anubias. There are some very attractive bronzy-red crypts. You may be able to grow a swordplant - hard to say. Tie the java fern to a small piece of bogwood for an attractive centerpiece. CO2 will probably not be limiting in your setup unless you have an awful lot of plants. Normally, you use an airstone/surface agitation to get atmospheric CO2 into the tank. If you are supplementing C02 to levels above atmospheric with yeast or compressed CO2, you turn off aeration to keep the added CO2 in the water. Flourish Excel is a very good CO2 substitute. Flourite is good stuff and crypts, grasses, and swords love it. Rinse it well before putting it in your tank and it will still cloud the water for a day or two. An easy start... Flourite substrate Plant with LOTS of crypts, anubias, and java fern tied to wood (The crypts usually will die back and regrow - remove the dying leaves and don't let it worry you) Fertilize with Flourish and Flourish Excel Amano shrimp and maybe a few otocinclus to control algae Good luck! -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to email me. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for the advice! Is there a decent lighting setup for a 10 gal.
that you can recommend? Perhaps I will invest in something more adequate if necessary. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave W. wrote:
Thanks for the advice! Is there a decent lighting setup for a 10 gal. that you can recommend? Perhaps I will invest in something more adequate if necessary. With the plants Altum recommended you should be ok for now. I have a 24-inch 20 watt fluorescent tube on a 15 gallon aquarium and Crypts, Anubias and Java moss do ok. Mind you, this aquarium gets some indirect daylight too. There's not too much point in investing a lot of dough in a 10-gallon unless you have severe space constraints. A bigger aquarium with home-made lighting might be the next step ![]() |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave W. wrote:
Thanks for the advice! Is there a decent lighting setup for a 10 gal. that you can recommend? Perhaps I will invest in something more adequate if necessary. You're welcome. :-) I love planted tanks. There's no reason not to try what you have first. You can always add more light and more demanding plants. If I were setting up a new 10 gallon planted tank, I'd move my 36W power compact fixture to it. I have it on a 15 gallon tall tank (same footprint as a 10) and it's not as bright as I would like at the bottom of the tank. I think it would be perfect for 10 gallons. I bought my JKS brand 36W fixture locally and it's a small one with a 17" long double tube and a straight 4-pin base. I've never seen a similar fixture by mail order but you can ask around. Coralife Aqualight makes a 20" 28W fixture that would also work. It comes with a 50/50 bulb so you have to buy a 6700K bulb separately for it. Buy the "legs" to lift the fixture up off of the tank. CF lights run rather hot and 10 gallon tanks heat fast. http://www.hellolights.com/201xcoraqpch.html You will need to plant heavily and use Excel or CO2 once you're up around 30W over a 10 gallon tank. Algae is fond of bright light so you want to be sure the plants establish fast and keep the upper hand. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to email me. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 10 May 2006 00:00:02 GMT, Altum
wrote: Dave W. wrote: Thanks for the advice! Is there a decent lighting setup for a 10 gal. that you can recommend? Perhaps I will invest in something more adequate if necessary. You're welcome. :-) I love planted tanks. There's no reason not to try what you have first. You can always add more light and more demanding plants. If I were setting up a new 10 gallon planted tank, I'd move my 36W power compact fixture to it. I have it on a 15 gallon tall tank (same footprint as a 10) and it's not as bright as I would like at the bottom of the tank. I think it would be perfect for 10 gallons. I bought my JKS brand 36W fixture locally and it's a small one with a 17" long double tube and a straight 4-pin base. I've never seen a similar fixture by mail order but you can ask around. Coralife Aqualight makes a 20" 28W fixture that would also work. It comes with a 50/50 bulb so you have to buy a 6700K bulb separately for it. Buy the "legs" to lift the fixture up off of the tank. CF lights run rather hot and 10 gallon tanks heat fast. http://www.hellolights.com/201xcoraqpch.html You will need to plant heavily and use Excel or CO2 once you're up around 30W over a 10 gallon tank. Algae is fond of bright light so you want to be sure the plants establish fast and keep the upper hand. I'm jealous. My son and a girl lived together and had a baby. My grandson. My son and the girl and the baby had a nice apartment. My son wanted an aquarium, he learned a lot from me growing up, he could manage it without my help. I told him to take his pick from the pile of tanks overhead in the garage. He took my prized treasure, my 15 Tall. I bought that at a yard sale for $5, and I have never seen one for sale, so I hate to think what the price is for one of those babies. What an absolutely perfect shape and size. I want. My son and the girl broke up. She kept everything in the apartment and will not give me back my aquarium. She said it was a gift and no take backs. She happens to be native american and she called me an indian giver. She is a bitch. She hasn't a clue how to care for it, it is empty in a closet. Double bitch. I think Waylon sang something about Mama, don't let your babies go to bed with bitches . . . -- Mister Gardener -- Pull the WEED to email me |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mister Gardener wrote:
I'm jealous. My son and a girl lived together and had a baby. My grandson. My son and the girl and the baby had a nice apartment. My son wanted an aquarium, he learned a lot from me growing up, he could manage it without my help. I told him to take his pick from the pile of tanks overhead in the garage. He took my prized treasure, my 15 Tall. I bought that at a yard sale for $5, and I have never seen one for sale, so I hate to think what the price is for one of those babies. What an absolutely perfect shape and size. I want. I had to special order the sucker. It's made by Oceanic and cost like $35 or $40, I think? Expensive for a small tank but I needed the 10 gal footprint - lease limit on tank size. I just wish I had the light to grow red plants. Anyone know of a 50-60W 20" CF fixture that I don't have to build myself? I LOVE the height. I can grow Crypt balansae...if the dratted things would grow again *grumble*... and crinum without having to lop them off or have leaves curled everywhere. I've even got an angel in there - there's enough depth for him to be comfortable. Not much swimming space, but he mostly spends his life jealously guarding the 9 square inches of surface where the food lands anyway. ;-) -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to email me. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Mister Gardener" wrote in message ... She happens to be native american and she called me an indian giver. She is a bitch. She hasn't a clue how to care for it, it is empty in a closet. Double bitch. ========================= I hope you at least get to see the grandchild if not the tank. Grandchildren can be such a joy! :-) -- Koi-Lo.... Frugal ponding since 1995. Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({* ------------- Get FREE newsgroup access from http://www.cheap56k.com |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Dave W. wrote:
Thanks for the advice! Is there a decent lighting setup for a 10 gal. that you can recommend? Perhaps I will invest in something more adequate if necessary. I have the exact same setup as you in a 10 gallon. It was planted about 2 years ago. I have java fern, a small sword, and more pygmy chain sword than I know what to do with. All the plants are happy with those 2 10 watt bulbs (which you can get cheaper in the fish section at Walmart). About a year ago I started adding Excel 3 times a week and now I have to pull out pygmy chain sword about once a month. I used EcoSoft and sand as a substrate. For my other tanks I used fine gravel (sifted tube sand) instead of the sand. Less messy when the catfish and/or loaches root in it. For picking plants, go to tropica.dk and peruse the plant listings. They show the light, temp, and ph requirements for a whole lot of plants as well as the size each will reach. -- It's turtles, all the way down |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 09 May 2006 21:23:33 GMT, Altum
wrote: lot of plants. Normally, you use an airstone/surface agitation to get atmospheric CO2 into the tank. Huh? You lost me. -- Mister Gardener -- Pull the WEED to email me |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Please Critique This Pond Advice | [email protected] | General | 4 | May 5th 06 02:56 AM |
Adding Plants to already established aquarium | Pedro | General | 8 | June 24th 05 01:31 AM |
Rec.ponds FAQ | Snooze | General | 0 | May 17th 05 03:05 AM |
Chat Week 2003 - Meet Julian Sprung, Martin Moe, Kevin Kohen, TomLang, more... | Jeff Barringer | Reefs | 0 | December 6th 03 05:55 AM |
Aquarium Plants Kasselmann, Christel | Jimmy | Plants | 4 | November 10th 03 02:12 PM |