Hello,
I have kept a 29 gallon aquarium for just over a year, and rarely encountered anything so much as a hiccup. Recently, I tried adding some clown loaches, and lost everything in my tank, save 2 Dwarf Gourami, 1 Zebra Danio, and a SAE, to Ich. In addition, a massive (what I think was) Hydra outbreak occured, and one of the Gouramis now has pop or cloud eye (secondary infection from ich, I am sure).
After battling this in the main tank (raised temp, added salt, tried quick cure and copper safe, removed carbon, etc.) for a few weeks and LOSING, I went and got a 10g kit, set it up, moved the remaining fish to that, and nuked the tank (about 4 days of bleaching, scrubbing, and, most of all, rinsing).
I now have the 29g set back up, but the fish remain in the 10g. It will soon require a lot of attention and TLC to prevent any deaths while it cycles. I am OK with that. I did have a few questions, though:
1. There was a post the other day about attaching the backgrounds on the tank with a link to an article about it. In that article, it said to put 2 - 3 inches of gravel in your tank. I had always read that the less gravel the better. When I set the tank back up, I left out a lot of the gravel, using really only what was necessary to cover the bottom and hold down any decorations, and it looks really good, actually. I am guessing that part of the hydra outbreak was due to my "deep gravel" vacuuming job when I was fighting off the ich. It stirred up a LOT of crap that had settled way down in there, thus creating. Is there any rule of thumb for the amount of gravel to use?
2. I plan on doing a fishless cycle in the 29g. Mostly, because I am a little leery of any residual clorox that would be harmful. Does anyone know what concentration of ammonia is in the "Great Value" brand Clear Ammonia at Wal Mart? I have heard anything from 4 - 20%. I am just trying to get a good idea of what it'll take to get it up to 5ppm. My best guess is... 5/1000000 x 29 (gallons) ~ 1/10 of a teaspoon, but that's at 100% ammonia. If it's only 20%, I would need 5 times that. Does anyone know how diluted the stuff is?
3. If I do not have any live plants in the tank, how long do I really need the lights to be on? I've seen anywhere from 10-14. I am a little worried about the 10g. The kit came with incadescent lights, but I replaced them with the screw-in flourescents, and MAN, they are BRIGHT. I tried only using one of them, but it looked a bit funny.
4. Any idea why my 2 Gouramis and the Zebra Danio would never get the ich? So many of my fish got it, but these never did. No spots, ever. The zebra was the last of his little school I put in there when I first got the tank a while back. For whatever reason, they don't like to eat with some of the other fish around, so they sort of shrivel up and die (sad, I know). Anyway, do some fish have a higher resistance to it? Anything tetra-related got it almost immediately and died. The clown loaches, two of whom brought it in, got it real bad and died right away.
5. If I can get the fish I put in the 10g to live through the cycle, would they be happy in there on a permanant basis? I may just leave them. I need to start medicating the one with pop/cloud eye again, but am scared I'll ruin the cycling process. Any ideas?
Thanks for reading. I'm sorry it got a little long winded. Nice forum, btw...
I have kept a 29 gallon aquarium for just over a year, and rarely encountered anything so much as a hiccup. Recently, I tried adding some clown loaches, and lost everything in my tank, save 2 Dwarf Gourami, 1 Zebra Danio, and a SAE, to Ich. In addition, a massive (what I think was) Hydra outbreak occured, and one of the Gouramis now has pop or cloud eye (secondary infection from ich, I am sure).
After battling this in the main tank (raised temp, added salt, tried quick cure and copper safe, removed carbon, etc.) for a few weeks and LOSING, I went and got a 10g kit, set it up, moved the remaining fish to that, and nuked the tank (about 4 days of bleaching, scrubbing, and, most of all, rinsing).
I now have the 29g set back up, but the fish remain in the 10g. It will soon require a lot of attention and TLC to prevent any deaths while it cycles. I am OK with that. I did have a few questions, though:
1. There was a post the other day about attaching the backgrounds on the tank with a link to an article about it. In that article, it said to put 2 - 3 inches of gravel in your tank. I had always read that the less gravel the better. When I set the tank back up, I left out a lot of the gravel, using really only what was necessary to cover the bottom and hold down any decorations, and it looks really good, actually. I am guessing that part of the hydra outbreak was due to my "deep gravel" vacuuming job when I was fighting off the ich. It stirred up a LOT of crap that had settled way down in there, thus creating. Is there any rule of thumb for the amount of gravel to use?
2. I plan on doing a fishless cycle in the 29g. Mostly, because I am a little leery of any residual clorox that would be harmful. Does anyone know what concentration of ammonia is in the "Great Value" brand Clear Ammonia at Wal Mart? I have heard anything from 4 - 20%. I am just trying to get a good idea of what it'll take to get it up to 5ppm. My best guess is... 5/1000000 x 29 (gallons) ~ 1/10 of a teaspoon, but that's at 100% ammonia. If it's only 20%, I would need 5 times that. Does anyone know how diluted the stuff is?
3. If I do not have any live plants in the tank, how long do I really need the lights to be on? I've seen anywhere from 10-14. I am a little worried about the 10g. The kit came with incadescent lights, but I replaced them with the screw-in flourescents, and MAN, they are BRIGHT. I tried only using one of them, but it looked a bit funny.
4. Any idea why my 2 Gouramis and the Zebra Danio would never get the ich? So many of my fish got it, but these never did. No spots, ever. The zebra was the last of his little school I put in there when I first got the tank a while back. For whatever reason, they don't like to eat with some of the other fish around, so they sort of shrivel up and die (sad, I know). Anyway, do some fish have a higher resistance to it? Anything tetra-related got it almost immediately and died. The clown loaches, two of whom brought it in, got it real bad and died right away.
5. If I can get the fish I put in the 10g to live through the cycle, would they be happy in there on a permanant basis? I may just leave them. I need to start medicating the one with pop/cloud eye again, but am scared I'll ruin the cycling process. Any ideas?
Thanks for reading. I'm sorry it got a little long winded. Nice forum, btw...