sorry for the delay, I got caught up in some unexpected stuff. (return of the runs:nilly
View attachment 139391
as you can see the HOB sucks up water from the "deep" end of the back of the tank. That little river will be sloped up to the land, but the HOB will be moved to where the driftwood is now. (brown piece, it is an arch) I will make some form of a waterfall with my hob, its a plain old Aqueon quietflow20.
Ok, where the land and the water meet for the long horizontal line will not be sloped. Should I slope this? If I don't end up sloping, there will be some form of a ramp in the far left corner for the frogs to climb up/down.
Lastly, I have some quick questions:
- What are good floater plants to provide cover for the shrimp and allow the froggies to climb on? They can be real/artifical
- What will make the frogs feel more at home (live plants, ect.) I have seen stuff thats moss which you buy in a bag and put around the land.
- Is it ok to use all gravel for the tank? If I use coco fiber for the land will it spoil the water if it gets in there for a day or too?
- How many worms should be feed weekly? (not here on thursday night-sun morning until the end of football)
- How many frogs is a good number?
1) Frogbit, red root floater and watter lettuce are all good.
2) On land just provide plenty of cover. This can be in the form of clay pots, driftwood or live plants.
3) Gravel tends to be sharp and can hurt the frogs sensitive skin when out of water. It will also cause serious dammage if the frogs eat it which can happen if they miss their target (bug). It is OK to use it under water but above should be softer like peat or coco fiber. If the coco fiber gets in the water it will be fine. Just scoop it out when you get a chance but it will not do any harm.
4) This depends on the size of the worms along with the size of the frogs. Your frogs will never be able to swallow a fully grown earthworm so it's best to feed little parts. For smaller frogs, 1/4 to 1/2 of a 6 inch worm per week. For larger frogs maybe 1/2 to a whole 6 inch worm. Just remember not to feed the whole thing at once.
5) This is always a debated topic. Many people say 1 frog per 4-5 gallons and that is gennerally a good rule of thumb unless you are working with a tall tank. In a standard 10 gallon 2 frogs sounds about good.
As for the divider between land and water, there should be something that they can hang onto for the entire border. Having fake plants hanging over the side could work or you could so an underwater moss wall along the boder so they have something to hold onto.
Other than that, it looks great!