a good day
This morning I was pretty happy with the condition of the tank. The brown diatom algae is diminishing noticably, although it is still obvious in some places, especially on the jungle vals. Some parts of the tank though have improved enough that I was actually surprised. The Blyxxa and water sprite, which have been covered in lots of brown, have started looking all green again. The stargrass and the roseafolia are looking pretty healthy. The micro sword and dwarf sag don't look too bad either.
There is also some nice growth that I haven't really been paying attention to. The jungle vals are putting out runners with baby plants on them in a number of places. The corkscrew val also (though in the following pictures there aren't any pictures of the new corkscrews, as they're behind the driftwood for the most part.) The apongeton crispus is starting to really look healthy.
Here are some pictures, more discussion below:
full tank this morning:
tank depth shot:
the left side of the tank, which I like a lot, both for how it's scaped and how the algae's going away:
new val, beside a curious bleeding heart:
roseafolia:
stargrass:
apongeton (and you actually can see some of the new corkscrew val growth behind the wood here):
My sword plants aren't doing great. They're definitely growing, and rooted, but the new leaves continue to look pretty faded and translucent. I'm not sure if that's a sign of a nutrient deficiency or maybe not enough light or CO2. The mother plant in my much lower-tech tank looks much better, although it always has some dark green algae on it.
The more I get happy with the growth and the diminishing algae, the less I like my aquascape. Like I said above, I like the left side. But the right side looks pretty bad to me. For one thing I hadn't intended to do a well-tended-garden look here. That circle of rocks, encircling the stem plant "bush", is something that I sort of improvised as I've added plants and moved things around. I don't really like it right now, though I think if that were the only non-natural looking section it might work. But all of the rest of the right side also looks too man-made. Obviously it's a work in progress here - I need to take the anubias out of the pot and attach it to something, and I have plans to put more driftwood over there. I'd really like to do something that looks natural and not planned, though. So still things to think about. Right now in general it's too hodge-podge and unnatural. Maybe eventually I'll let the vals take over more. Or that stargrass, depending on how it develops (I don't know much about it right now.) Definitely will be getting rid of the anacharis (well, moving it into an overflow tank for now.)
The background also needs help, and I need to come up with a way to stop seeing the equipment so clearly.
I received my order of dry ferts in the mail yesterday from aquariumfertilizer.com. They were pretty quick with the delivery. I'm really not sure how I'm going to approach dosing right now. I am wanting to try staying away from a straight-up EI approach, as I don't want to (nor think I should need to) change 50% of the water weekly. I'd like to do a more limited fertilizing approach, but I'm not sure how to go about that yet.
STILL haven't switched to the 3 bottle CO2 setup I made. I have a glass diffuser coming that I got used from somebody, and I think once I get that I'll put it in on the other side of the tank. Then I'll decide whether to remove the current bottle or just setup more bottles to continue pumping bubbes into the canister.
Any thoughts on anything would be much appreciated.