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Luke*

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Posts posted by Luke*

  1. could always start a new culture with a few of the whiteworms and maybe keep it inside somewhere cool or somewhere flies can't get to it, or use a finer mesh. another option is to put a finer mesh on the current culture and remove the flies every day or so until none are left

  2. wow verrry nice! awesome blend of green plants :)

    BBA seems to always become an issue, it can be killed tough with a double dose of flourish excel. then i guess just keep adding a bit to keep it away or treat again when it comes back

    i would just recommend to get rid of the macandra (?) in the back left as it looks a bit out of place/clunky/spread out to me. the colour takes away from the nice green medley elsewhere. also, although it's now nice and lush, i prefer the asymmetry of your feb 2014 pic for some reason. and the only other verrry minor thing i'd change is to have smaller fish so it gives the tank the illusion of being even larger. wicked job tho, is a lot of that plant actually growing on the wood?

    cool to see lemon tetras, love those fish

  3. lol if only i lived in southland i could've done so much better

    perhaps you're meaning without a heater and maybe outside? over summer it is definitely possible with cooler water species like danios and barbs. i've done it (during summer) in tauranga with barbs

  4. wowww stunning ronnie! and they are HUGE! how long have you had them? they look surprisingly relaxed :)

    edit: jaide discus prefer a deeper tank as their bodies are long from top to bottom. i think also the depth helps them feel safer from skyward threats. nice looking discus too btw!

  5. if you strip it back to just oxheart (and i recommend using gelatin as a binder) then they shouldn't be able to resist it.. just try a tiny bit at first till they get used to identifying it and get hooked; it will look foreign to them at first after other foods. Then the next mix you do you can add in other ingredients (carrot, an egg, spinach, multi-vitamins, little bit of garlic etc)

  6. i had a 4 ft tank with pieces of slate (charcoal colour) simply siliconed to the back glass panel. i found even in a high-tech set up i never needed to clean it; it just got a little furry algae on it around the edges but you couldn't notice it, i think it actually added to the look. and i way preferred it to just a plain glass back

  7. mmm love lemon tetras. if you have a nice planted tank they should colour up wayyy more than shop tanks, they should get a nice yellow body and the males will have a striking black anal fin. if you keep the water good they will spawn about once a week in ambulia or other fine-leaved plant

    How big was the tank ive got a 215l with 11 in could I do with more perhaps?

    depends what else is in there ;) if just them you could put a lot more in there

  8. oh awsome you wouldnt happen to have any for sale would you?

    and thanks dude but its quite easy you just have to wait for the timers to switch off haha

    lol @ bout the timers. gotta make sure they don't go on too early at the weekends ;) i am trying to breed some at the moment actually, but i know some are/were around for sale in auck shops so should be down there too? i'll still be a few months off

  9. Your lighting is fine it's only 85w over 215litres.. that's actually low (<0.5w/litre), I prefer 1w/litre or more. I'd recommend some hardy slow-growing plants like java fern, you can even tie it to a rock, and it can survive algae attacks. you should at least that way get something growing to help to absorb excess nutrients

    I have an idea, those sponge cartridges you replaced, do they have carbon inside them? i came across some that did, possibly they are leaching phosphate (as you mentioned earlier re carbon). try the PO4 tests again on a bucket of tap water and bucket of tap water with the cartridge submerged, test every second day for a week or two

    I'd also recommend doing lmsmith's tests:

    I would try doing a huge water change to get your phosphate down as low as possible. Take a phoshate reading. Do your regular routine with lighting, but don't feed the tank. Do another phosphate reading in 5 days without feeding and see how much the fish are adding to the system.

    I wonder if it's also worth setting up another container of a similar size and ghost feeding it then doing a phosphate reading - that way you can see if the fish or food are adding more phosphate?

    If it's the food, you can change to a lower phosphate food. If it's the fish, you can reduce the bioload by taking out some fish and seeing if that helps.

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