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nays

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Everything posted by nays

  1. nays

    Ammonia in peat

    Brooklands peat has the same properties as Yates Hauraki Gold peat, end pH is the same, ammonia content is the same. It looks identical and so I'm assuming it's the same product in a smaller bag. I double checked my treated tap water for ammonia after dechlorinating, none detected so it's definitely all coming from the peat.
  2. nays

    Ammonia in peat

    Little update - the female of the courting pair is now holding eggs (mouthbrooders). I'm taking that as a sign that they're not at all bothered by the ammonia, which is still well over 2ppm. I haven't done any more water changes, there's no point since the ammonia isn't getting processed. I've added the other three fish to the display tank, so only the breeding pair remain in the quarantine tank. Will buy some Brooklands aquarium peat this weekend and test that for ammonia.
  3. nays

    Ammonia in peat

    Thanks, yes, the test shows the total of ammonia + ammonium. Wellington's water is only treated with chlorine, not chloramine to my knowledge, so I'm fairly sure that the ammonia I'm seeing is from the peat itself rather than chloramines. But I'll test some dechlorinated tap water to confirm.
  4. nays

    Ammonia in peat

    Yes, I'm using Prime at the moment.
  5. nays

    Ammonia in peat

    Yes, both the Yates peat.
  6. I realise this is an old post but just thought I'd add that I've fishless cycled using ammonium sulphate from the garden centre; I just dissolve some in water and add it to the tank until I get to 2ppm, then top up with more solution as needed. If there's any unprocessed ammonia when fish are added, I do a 100% water change immediately before adding them. If ammonia is at 0 there's no need, but I don't let ammonia bottom out while the tank is unstocked for fear of starving the new bacterial colony. No surfactants to worry about, and the sulphate part does no harm - I've read that it could reduce pH, but haven't found that to be the case.
  7. I keep chocolate gouramis in a blackwater tank. For water changes I make tannin-stained water with a pH of around 5 using Yates Hauraki Gold peat in a coffee maker (the old school kind that drips hot water through the grounds). A lot of sources say that pH doesn't matter and that soft water is what counts, but I found that the chocolates I had didn't look good or stay healthy for long until I brought the pH way down with peat. My remaining pair is going strong, and a few days ago I got five more to keep them company. The newbies are in a quarantine tank and I have been changing out some of their water for peat water every day to acclimatise them to the conditions of the display tank. The quarantine filter wasn't cycled so I've been feeding light, every second day in addition to doing 50% daily water changes. I have tested pH daily to keep an eye on the drop, but yesterday I tested for ammonia and nitrite too and was startled to find that not only was ammonia already at 1 ppm before I did the water change, it actually increased after the water change. Now, the fish in quarantine have not showed any abnormal behaviour and I even saw courting today. The pH is currently at or below 6 (bottom limit of the API test, will use SERA next time as it covers low range) and at that low pH the ammonia is not toxic to the fish, so I'm not concerned for their immediate welfare. (I will be checking often for nitrite as I understand that it is more toxic in acid conditions.) But I was disturbed, because as the peat doesn't have any added fertilisers, it never occurred to me that it would contain ammonia. So, I made up another batch of peat water today and tested it - it look to be somewhere between 2 and 4 ppm, I couldn't really tell, but high. I tested my display tank, which had a water change the day before yesterday - barest trace of ammonia, no nitrite, nitrate about 5ppm. I've obviously been unknowingly dumping ammonia in there for ages and the filter just clears it over a few days. I'm puzzled. A quick internet search didn't yield much information, a couple of aquarists who have found that their peat contains ammonia, a couple of companies who sell peat praising it for being excellent at absorbing ammonia. Does all peat naturally contain ammonia? Does anyone know? I am on my second bag of peat, I have no idea whether the first bag I used added ammonia though I suppose it did. I do remember when I started using it being concerned about the beneficial bacteria dying off as the pH dropped, and I tested to check. I didn't see any ammonia at the time, but I'm sure I would have tested before a water change, not afterwards. What about peat granules sold for aquarium use, has anyone ever tested them? It seems very odd to me that peat is widely recommended as a natural way to soften water, with no mention of releasing ammonia. And what about water changes going forward? I really want to keep the pH down and the peat is the only way that has worked for me - using distilled water only got me down to high 6's and I was still losing fish. They are now healthy, vibrant and apparently happy in their peat water, so perhaps I should keep just doing what I'm doing and not worry about the ammonia? If anyone here has experience with blackwater tanks and/or using peat, I'd be grateful to hear your thoughts.
  8. That's the most huggable crab I've ever seen...
  9. nays

    Hi from Auckland

    Hi Dave. Quite an assortment of fish you've had already! I've got cardinals, lemons, and chocolate gouramis too, plus a couple of bettas, kuhli loaches and corys, spread across four tanks.
  10. Sounds fun, will have to pick one up and try it out!
  11. Is that an Aquastyle 850 tank? Looks the same as mine. If so, you can either buy Aqua One or Hagen Power Glo tubes for the two longer tubes, but the shorter one is an odd size and only available from Aqua One. Anywhere that sells the tanks should supply the bulbs, as Shilo said Hollywood Fish Farm sells them online, there's also http://www.aquaone.petmart.co.nz/ which is where I got mine about a year and a half ago. Cheapest price I could find, their service was good and the bulbs were very well packaged in a sturdy cardboard tube. ETA: And the shipping was free!
  12. Snails will eat any slimy algae that is growing on stuff in the tank, but won't help with the green water. Daphnia eat the microalgae that makes the water green, but I'd imagine they would last long around the goldfish. If it's a glass tank, you could paint or cover up the sides to reduce the sunlight entering the tank (I assume the top is shaded by the grow bed). Note that aquatic snails can harbour parasites that can infect humans such as liver flukes and these can be picked up from eating raw watercress; the risk is very small but if you do add snails, don't take wild ones from streams accessible to livestock.
  13. Animates sells them in store and online, they're expensive though.
  14. Anubias nana stays short and is basically foolproof, and fairly slow growing so pruning is rarely needed - it is usually attached to driftwood or rocks. Dwarf sag is a grassy type plant that is fairly short and is supposed to be easy to grow, though I haven't grown it myself. Rotala rotundifolia is a stem plant that is very pretty and not very demanding, it will need regular cutting and replanting though. When the water enters your filter it should first pass through your coarse sponge, then your fine sponge, then your filter floss, then any carbon or other chemical media if used, then finally your ceramic noodles. Your noodles come last to keep them extra clean, to avoid clogging up the pores in the media where the bacteria do their job. It sounds like you have the noodles first in line? I don't know what ceramiscrub is, but the order you want is mechanical > chemical > biological. Those extra plants look really good where you put them at the back, they've filled the tank out nicely :-)
  15. Welcome Lanshark! You could try having the driftwood on a different angle so it's sitting lower on the substrate, at the moment it's very open under there and also it looks kind of unnatural. Other than that just more plants and/or wood. Your java fern will provide plenty of cover when it gets large. I managed to find a little piece of driftwood on the beach which makes a perfect fish cave. I like the yellow water (and I'm sure your rams do too).
  16. Must have taken a while to plant all the cuttings! Looks great, now it just needs some fish :-)
  17. nays

    Fish tower

    I'd never heard of a fish tower and googled it - so cool! Is yours in a pond or an aquarium? I'd love to see a pic. Look at pictures online, most of them seem to have a little airspace at the top so it might just be a normal thing? I found this page explaining the hows and whys and it said that the vacuum created can cause water to vaporise and dissolved gases to precipitate, lowering the water level slightly: http://www.nettally.com/palmk/FishHiRise.html Otherwise if the water is actually draining out, I would suggest your tower isn't completely airtight, maybe a very slow 'leak'?
  18. OMG again. Sorry for your fish losses :-( What a run of bad luck! Although you might consider yourself lucky that it wasn't 750 litres on the floor instead of 70 and all the fish dead.
  19. Nice! I like the way the glosso is starting to creep over the rocks.
  20. OMG. Is there solid timber holding up the tank in the existing stand? All those uprights look like MDF?
  21. nays

    Kindergarten tank

    Thanks Alan; I meant that our water supplier does not add chloramine to disinfect. My understanding is that where chloramine is used, a water conditioner that converts ammonia to ammonium (such as Prime) is advisable because the sodium thiosulphate will release the ammonia from the chloramine. I'm sure you're correct that our tap water will contain some chloramine even without it being added, but as I've never detected ammonia after using water conditioner, I'm assuming the amount is so small as to be insignificant?
  22. Thanks for the laugh... off to eat chocolate now!
  23. nays

    Kindergarten tank

    The water here in Wellington is slightly alkaline, about pH 7.5 but very soft, 2 deg KH and GH, out of my tap anyway. Tetras are fine in it. The water here is chlorinated so you will need to use water conditioner. Any brand of water conditioner is fine because Wellington water does not contain chloramine. Don't buy water, and don't try to adjust the pH for them. It is not only unnecessary, but will potentially cause dangerous swings in the water chemistry, especially in such a small tank. Some driftwood won't hurt but isn't necessary, may not reduce the pH much if at all, and will reduce the amount of water in the (already tiny) tank. I would recommend either cycling the tank at home for a few months before taking it to the kindergarten, or use cycled media if possible, as in a tiny tank there's a fair chance of losses and the children might be upset by dead fish. I personally wouldn't put tetras (or any fish except fry, actually) in a 20 litre tank. If you really want to use the tank, a betta would be more suitable. A veiltail betta costs $20 from Animates, only a couple of bucks more than six neons at about $3 each. Bettas are more interactive as well; neons will just dart away whenever the children approach but a betta will swim up to them and say hi. Bettas are also hardier than neon tetras. I hope it goes without saying that you will need a filter and heater. Be careful with letting the kids help maintain the tank, electricity and water and all that... If you want a little cycled media I can help you out, let me know :-)
  24. nays

    Apple Snail

    That's so sad, sorry :-(
  25. Genuine Poret foam, black, 30ppi, 50mm thick, leftovers from making mattenfilters. Two pieces, roughly 10 x 37 cm and 14 x 47 cm. Cut to fit or cut into cubes for use in a canister filter or sump. I'm in Churton Park.
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