? for tall tank owners:

TheZoo

Curiouser and curiouser!
Apr 12, 2006
635
0
0
melting in Houston, TX
Im pretty sure these questions have very obvious answers:
When you go to clean a very tall tank, do you just use a siphon with a very long rigid tube? And use long tools for moving and dealing with the decor? And a step ladder? How much of a mess do you make??
 
Some gravel vac makers have varying diameter tubes. I have 4, varying from 12" to 24" in length and 1" to 2 1/4" diameter. I move my stuff around at the end of a water change, before I refill, minimizing my arm in the water. I also clean my arms well before hand, we do not need soap/oil residues in there, and I keep a set of 18" tongs around. On the two tanks that are tall, I have a 10" step stool, all other I can reach over without putting weight on the sides.

I have never made a mess! Never once, in all my years, have any of my fish complained they got wet from my water changes!

P.S.
(my wife may or may not agree with that)

:bowing:
 
rbishop said:
Never once, in all my years, have any of my fish complained they got wet from my water changes!
:rolleyes:
haha! Cool...just something Id been wondering about since getting into fishkeeping!
 
Funny you ask this b/c it's not the easiest for me. I am only 5'2 and I have a 120. The full stand, tank, canopy are taller than I am. When I work in the tank I have to use a step stool, but even then it is hard to reach the bottom. I do have the 20" tongs to help with planting the plants, grabbing things, etc. However, it is still very hard to reach the back of the tank, lol. I tried a step ladder once and it slid and I almost became part of that fish tank. But, its all worth it, and i do make a little of a mess, but i just put towels down around the tank before i get started.
 
prakash said:
if you have sand substrate theres no need for siphoning

You need to do siphoning with sand, for the same reason as you would for a gravel substrate. To remove rotting fish waste.
 
dorkfish said:
You need to do siphoning with sand, for the same reason as you would for a gravel substrate. To remove rotting fish waste.


Ive never had any problems not siphoning as long as you do reg water changes
 
It depends on if you have plants and snails or not with that sand.

The rotting fish waste actually becomes a good fert. But if you have a lot of it I still recommend siphoning. I rarely need to siphon unless I notice an excess of dead plant matter laying on the bottom. Still do water changes of course, just not to often I need to actually siphon the sand.
 
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