75 gallon Planted Office Tank Journal

D70 and a macro lens? I'm jealous. I've been thinking about getting a macro lens for my D40. Do you notice a big difference in your ability to take shots of your fishy friends? Right now I'm just using the standard 18-55mm lens that came with the camera. A lens can be quite an investment. Which one did you purchase?

Sigma 50mm EX DG Macro Lens

D70 is pretty old now, got it the week it came out back in the day. The pop up flash broke about 2 years ago, the SB-600 speedlight (flash) also busted after some batteries leaked acid all over the insides. The 18-125m lens I had, which was a great lens, just busted the gear mechanism after sand? got inside. Sounds rough, but I have taken about 30,000 photos with it so i would say I got my moneys worth.

This thread is not really meant for photography, but now we are on the subject, I want to point out the best camera review site on the internet. This is not my opinion, it is the best, bar none. Massive camera reviews that can take hours to read, and none of the puff pieces you see in camera mags.

Check it out in case you didnt already know: dp review

:worthy:
 
Tank looks great & I love all these pictures! Especially the water change sequence, it was fun to see how someone else does it.

Thanks!

How many bulbs are you currently running?

2 out of 3. I have not been running the grow bulb for past 3 weeks+.

Your CO2 is on a timer right? Have the CO2 come on before the light so when when the lights come on there is already a steady supply of CO2 for the plants to use, usually about an hour will do it but find what works best for your tank. This should help with that BBA I saw too. Remove any staghorn that you can, even trimming highly affected leaves (usually old leaves) & keep up your EI dosing and general maintenance and it will go away.

When you do your WC you should be hovering over the surface of the substrate to suck up the mulm & even doing light gravel vacing where there are not plants is a good idea. Eco-complete is very irregular so I have noticed that LOTS of stuff gets trapped in it. After awhile (6mos-1yr) the substrate will be more self sustaining but for now it needs your help.

On a timer, but I only have one. I think I will pick up another timer and get the co2 coming on ahead of time like you suggest. Yesturday, I ripped out half the plants on the right side of tank and got the gravel vac down into the substate. There was just too much stuff on the gravel and in the gravel to let this continue. :yuck: I took out 2 x 5 gallon buckets worth of stuff, but didnt want to go too wild, since I have done a 50% water change only 3 days prior. I will do the same on the left side on friday. There is just too much mulm, and the plants and substate cannot accomodate it all yet. I think I will continue to rough up the substate as long as it takes. I think the roots will be fine, and if they die off a bit, no real loss, as the staghorn has been eating them alive anyway. :irked:

Just wondering, it looks like you do not have the end cap on your filter spray bar so that most of the water comes out the end of the bar instead of through to little holes, do you?

You are correct, I had taken off the endcap so that the spray from filter#1 would not blast the background plants too hard after a trim. I only had the cap off about a week, and it's now back on. With it off, it moved around the water in the back side, which was nice. I think I will continue to play with that arrangement, at least until I figure out the final locations for filter#2 in/out.

Thanks for posting! :hi:
 
Lovely plant growth & OMG all the fish!! Makes this Cat's ears perk right up! Glad to see you are still at it! Great job.
 
After getting very aggressive with my substrate vaccuming, I think I am making some headway. My staghorn algae seems to have been caused my a major mulm buildup, which snuck up on me. I think that when I hooked up the co2 reactor inline with the output on my eheim classic canister filter, I slowed the flow rate by quite a bit. I therefore had alot less filtration happening than I thought I did, and I really didnt notice until I had a second eheim classic side-by-side. :wall: I also got in the habit of changing only the water, as opposed to getting right above the substate and sucking up mulm from the entire substrate surface. For several weeks, I just stuck the hose in the tank and sucked out 50% of the water. Not good enough, and I paid the price by having a mulm explosion. Then a two snails died, an oto died, and a few shrimp got eaten. Combine a slightly smaller algae cleanup crew with a slightly overstocked tank, and I made a bad problem even worse. :uhoh:

I did about a 10% water change on Mon, and this was only junk from inside the substrate. I did the same thing on Wed on the other side of the tank. Today I did my normal 50% water change, and did the same thing and parts of the tank. I chopped out alot of algea covered leaves and dead plant matter, although I did not get it all. Water seems to be looking better, as before the tank still looked pretty difty after a water change, and it looks nice and clean as I type this. :grinno:

The second filter is also helping out alot, and it's making up for the restricted flow from the biological and co2 filtration loop. If you remember, this second filter in only chemical and mechanical filtration, and I am getting a very strong flow rate.

I have seen very little pearling in the last month. I think this is because of the excessive algae and because I have only been running 2 lights. The grow light has been off for more than a month, and honestly, that test seemed to not go so well. I guess i will run all 3 for a month, and test those results even though technically, this might be too much light.

Rainbow fish seem very happy, and I give them a wide variety of foods. I give them a different frozen treat two times a week. I set the frozen cube in a Starbucks cup of tank water for about 1/2 hour, and then just pour it in. The fish like the thawed individual shrimp/krill/ etc much more than a cut up frozen cube.

The young parva rainbow and turquoise have not colored up yet. I read an article the other day that said this is why rainbows never really caught on with the general public, they just dont look good until they are adult sized. I can wait. :grinyes:

My red root floater doesnt seem to have red roots, but it certainly has come back from the brink. I really didnt think the crap I got in the mail would ever grow, but it is doing quite well now and expanding. I think it may be mis-identified, but I guess I dont really care that much. The pennywort has grown very well, and I am getting the "lilly-pad" look I wanted with or without this other floater.

See you next week.
 
New Pics

Sorry for the Algae. :yuck:

I did do my best to hide it in these photos and only show you the nice shots. :laugh:


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I did come plant chopping this week, looks a little uneven.

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meh.
 
Looks pretty good!
 
I'm so glad you were able to find the causes of your algae issues, sometimes it is hard to figure out. I do want to point out though that if you had all 3 lights running instead of the 2 your imbalance could have been more damaging, more light faster results (in algae too), less wiggle room. The lack of pearling could be attributed to the decrease in light but you also had an algae issue at the same time so it is hard to nail that one down. Personally, now that you have your mulm situation under control I would give the 2 bulbs a little more time, then if you don't see the results you want try more light. Your tank has seen a lot of changes lately, changing it again so soon will likely throw something off balance again.


The CO2 reactor reduces flow majorly! I consider my Eheim 2213 with inline reactor a CO2 diffuser with a prefilter & that's it! :)

It looks like the rainbows are starting to color up though & so is your tank! Your pictures are really clear!

I think your doing a great job, keep it up!
 
Ms Krib & the last rainbow are looking very nice! Sounds like you're getting the hang of the lights & vacuuming thing, I have no idea on the CO2 but it's really coming together! All part of the learning curve for each tank set-up. Keep up the good work!
 
Decided to test Fe today.

Looks like I have too much Fe, like 1.0 ppm instead of .5ppm. I am going to change my dosing regime. I did some more reading on Tom Barrs site, and it looks like I am adding too much GH Booster too, although I think this does not cause issues, it's just wasting GH Booster.

Here is my new plan:

KN03 = 3/4 tsp 3 times a week
KH2P04 = 1/4 tsp 3 times a week
Trace = 1/4 tsp 3 times a week
Iron = 1/8 tsp 3 times a week (this is less than before)
GH Booster = 1 tsp 1 time a week (this is less than before)
50% Water Change = 1 time a week

Most of my shrimp have been eaten. There are still a few big ones left. Some more of my snails died, dont really know why. If the Otos are eating all the algae on the glass (they are), would the snails starve?

Tanks looking cleaner. I have been manually removing algae covered leaves once I see that they are heavily covered.

It's a constant battle. I am going to keep working until I get this thing under control.
 
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