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nudge

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Posts posted by nudge

  1. I agree with "bigfishhead" overall footprint is better than litres. tank 1 would be my pick. As far as stocking goes the length of both tanks are similar and  prob a bit short for the bigger open water haps but tank 1 is way deeper(front to back) so will give you more fish variety for your stocking. I have found that africans seem to be fine with a little less hight (top of tank to bottom) but definately need the width (front to back)

     

    IMO it is better to sacrifice a bit of length and volume to gain a bigger footprint 

  2. Thought I would post a few fish pics, been a while. Have a colony of about 25 duboisi now and a trio of malawi dolphins, 6 leleupi which all seem to be male and I started with 5 calvus, all turned out to be male, lost 2 and sold one so have 2 males left. Thinking about upgrading to a 6ft x 2ft tank, think they would enjoy the extra space.

    Sorry bout the picture quality, they are from my phone,but it seems to take a better picture than my camera.

    20150509_221822-2_zpsu8we9iv2.jpg

    20150524_170809_zpsoml3yhdw.jpg

    20150524_170729_zpspi8catet.jpg

    20150524_170738_zpskguyax5e.jpg

    20150520_223626_1_zpssuj0gjgn.jpg

    20150524_170833_zpswssbadyv.jpg

  3. That sucks sam. Sounds like it may not be bloat, if they are eating well and you don't see any white poo sorta makes me think it's not bloat. Not eating is one of the 1st signs of bloat. I would recommend gettin hold of some metro if poss even if it's not bloat now and the deaths have been bought on by stress, stress can lead to bloat.

    If you are feeding the same food as what they were eating before you got them I would doubt that it was the food that was causing the problem as well. I feed NLS to and think it is a good food but changing to something different now might cause more issues, i would stick with the food you have and slowly add small quantities of a new food after a couple of weeks and slowly ween them off the original food if you do want to change.

    That pretty much leaves ph shock from different water parameters as a possible cause and the stress of a new enviroment. Unfortunately it's pretty much guess work at the moment. I would keep up with the epsom salt and water changes being careful to make sure the gh and kh of the water you are replacing matches whats in the tank already.

    Have you had anymore losses?

  4. I have a cutting in my troph tank its a decent size and had a lot of roots when i put it in the tank but over time the roots were munched by my trophs. I have since put the roots in a piece of fx5 tubing to see if they will come back. I'm struggling to keep my nitrates under control. I change about 60-70% every week with a good gravel vac, run 2 filters a fx5 and a cf1200. The tank is 350L and has about 40 fish max.

    I do a wc every tues night and my nitrate readings were I would guess about 60ppm as it is so hard to tell between 40-80 on the colour card. I miss a feeding on weds and tested my water tonight (thurs) and they are around 20ppm already and i have only fed them twice since tues. I feed pretty light twice a day and enough food that it is all gone in about 40 secs per feed.

    So i guess my question is that because of the lack of root system on my pothos plant could that be the reason I am not really seeing any benefit in nitrate reduction since I introduced it to the tank?

  5. If you are wanting to add peacocks are you thinking of a single breeding group or are you looking at multiple males?

    If you want the auratus you would prob want to go for a single male with multiple females, say 1m to 6+females.

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