Wow Man!
I sure have learned a lot from reading this stuff. Altho I have been keeping fish for 12+ years, I do not claim any sort of expertise. Even now, all that scientific stuff makes my head hurt!
I think I have been very lucky - I have lost very few fish, and most of those were in the early years b4 anyone told me about testing water and doing water changes. I was so ignorant I hadn't bothered to do any research. It's a miracle any of my fish ever lived!
But now, I have developed a routine that seems to work, water stays clear, the fish stay healthy and I haven't lost any fish in several years. In fact I have a pimelodidae that's 11 inches, whom I've had for 11 years. A large (3 inch) emerald green Peruvian cory that I've had for 7 years and 2 red-fin tinfoil barbs that I've had for 6 years.
The thing is - everyone has an opinion - some may be worth more than others and many are backed up by scientific fact of one kind or another. And based on 50+ years of interacting with people - none of us is going to be able to change another's mind!
If I may play the diplomat, allow me to summarize what I have gleaned from this thread:
- seems we all agree that proper filtration is a must;
- cleanliness is also a must - however it is you accomplish that
- water quality & proper chemical balance are a must, so testing is important
All of these things can be affected by multiple variables - tank size; number, size and type of fish and plants; temperature; light; quality of the water when it cames from the tap - whether from a well or a municipal source - and finally - the amount of time one is willing or able to dedicate to the care of their aquatic friends. As each of these variables may shift at any point in time, it's important to recognize those changes and be able to react. If your municiple water administrator dumps a bunch of chlorine in the water at the beginning of each month - you need to be able to recognize that and respond. If you live in Nova Scotia and use heaters in your tanks, but go to Florida for a week in the winter - whoever is fish-sitting for you needs to know to what to do in the event of a power outage - etc etc.
So - what all this means is - no one thing will be right for eveyone. If your water stays clean and balanced and your fish stay helathy without chemicals and/or frequent water changes - great. The important thing is to find what works for you - and it may be different for each tank you have - and to dedicate the time it takes to keep it working.
Can't we all just get along???!!!
