A distant relative of mine recently moved and asked me to take over the care of her 10 gallon fish aquarium. She said she put a lot of time and research into making it a great tank and didn't want to see that go to waste. I was excited because I have always been interested in starting up an aquarium and I thought getting one that was already established would be a nice bonus. Wrong!
She brought the tank over and set it up in my home this week. I knew right away that this tank was not the glorious work of art she boasted about.
Here are the details:
It is a ten gallon aquarium. There is a heater in the tank that looks ancient. I can't even read the numbers on the settings, but she told me to leave the knob where it was and it would be fine. The rocks and decorations are caked in algea and brown hairy goop. There is a large black filter that hangs on the inside of the tank down in the water (it takes up alot of space). There is a live plant. It looks like some sort of long grassy plant, but I think it is dead because it's all brown and limp.
I made the mistake of taking some of the decorations out to clean them and found out that any disturbing of rocks or decor in the tank unearths months of dirt and debris and clouds the entire tank so you can hardly even see the fish.
The aquarium currently houses the following fish:
2 flat black and white tiger striped fish with long, flowy fins.
2 flat clear/white fish that have the same body type as the tiger ones, but short fins and no stripes.
2 "glowfish" a pink and a yellow
1 catfish looking thing that hides under the decorations like an "algea eater"
There was a small white guppy with a fan-like wavy tail that died the first day it was here.
I had a 20 gallon aquarium as a child that I cared for myself and never had problems but that was almost 15 years ago and I honestly know practically nothing about tank care and maintenance.
I immediately went to the pet store and purchased a filter that hangs on the back of the tank that was recommended by their aquarium specialist and a new reliable heater. I also bought test strips and checked the water in the tank. The values are all over the place. It has a very high ph and nothing matches up in the "safe" part of the test strip.
I feel like everything in the tank is just old and nasty and needs to be thrown out. I plan on purchasing new rocks and decorations tomorrow.
If anyone can help I need the following advice.
At this point, can I do a 100% water change on the tank? Don't I have to let the tank sit and rebuild the proper balance before adding the fish back in? If so, what should I do with the fish while I do that?
Is there any danger to getting all new rocks and decor as long as they are cleaned well with hot water before I add them in?
I also don't know how to go about reintroducing the fish to the tank because I read that putting too many in at once can throw the balance off and I know 10 gallon tanks are harder to manage in the sense that a small water problem effects the fish more than in a larger tank.
My main goal is this. I want to fix this tank without killing all the fish. any advice would be much appreciated. I feel like these fish are going to die if I dont get this underway.
Sorry for the long-winded post and thank you in advance for your advice and wisdom.
:goldfish: <----------This goldfish cracker is cute.
~Sirius
She brought the tank over and set it up in my home this week. I knew right away that this tank was not the glorious work of art she boasted about.
Here are the details:
It is a ten gallon aquarium. There is a heater in the tank that looks ancient. I can't even read the numbers on the settings, but she told me to leave the knob where it was and it would be fine. The rocks and decorations are caked in algea and brown hairy goop. There is a large black filter that hangs on the inside of the tank down in the water (it takes up alot of space). There is a live plant. It looks like some sort of long grassy plant, but I think it is dead because it's all brown and limp.
I made the mistake of taking some of the decorations out to clean them and found out that any disturbing of rocks or decor in the tank unearths months of dirt and debris and clouds the entire tank so you can hardly even see the fish.
The aquarium currently houses the following fish:
2 flat black and white tiger striped fish with long, flowy fins.
2 flat clear/white fish that have the same body type as the tiger ones, but short fins and no stripes.
2 "glowfish" a pink and a yellow
1 catfish looking thing that hides under the decorations like an "algea eater"
There was a small white guppy with a fan-like wavy tail that died the first day it was here.
I had a 20 gallon aquarium as a child that I cared for myself and never had problems but that was almost 15 years ago and I honestly know practically nothing about tank care and maintenance.
I immediately went to the pet store and purchased a filter that hangs on the back of the tank that was recommended by their aquarium specialist and a new reliable heater. I also bought test strips and checked the water in the tank. The values are all over the place. It has a very high ph and nothing matches up in the "safe" part of the test strip.
I feel like everything in the tank is just old and nasty and needs to be thrown out. I plan on purchasing new rocks and decorations tomorrow.
If anyone can help I need the following advice.
At this point, can I do a 100% water change on the tank? Don't I have to let the tank sit and rebuild the proper balance before adding the fish back in? If so, what should I do with the fish while I do that?
Is there any danger to getting all new rocks and decor as long as they are cleaned well with hot water before I add them in?
I also don't know how to go about reintroducing the fish to the tank because I read that putting too many in at once can throw the balance off and I know 10 gallon tanks are harder to manage in the sense that a small water problem effects the fish more than in a larger tank.
My main goal is this. I want to fix this tank without killing all the fish. any advice would be much appreciated. I feel like these fish are going to die if I dont get this underway.
Sorry for the long-winded post and thank you in advance for your advice and wisdom.
:goldfish: <----------This goldfish cracker is cute.
~Sirius