Okay ... tap water's coming out 7.2, but you KNOW it's going to be higher tomorrow when the CO2 has evaporated, etc. KH of 3 is measuring somewhere in a distant memory--which is strange, since I don't have a water hardness test kit. I think I might have had it done at an lfs--not sure. I could be wrong, too. But 3 does ring a bell ... I think I need to retest it, don't I.
I have two old, nice chunks of store-bought driftwood in there, and no rocks except the gravel--a dark colored, small grained "no-rinse" gravel bought from a well-known company (whose medium-brown gravel, by the way, which is NOT labeled as African cichlid mix, contains shell fragments ...). So no elements in the tank that I know of which would be raising the pH. Other ornaments include a medium-sized store-bought ceramic cave and castle.
"What is opposite limestone?" Say again? ...
I agree on the PhDown stuff. I've tried it in the past. Bounced right back up (that was at the other address, though ...)
So the solution is looking like peat. But I've heard that peat is unsteady and unreliable, because it fluctuates. True? I don't mind boiling it--and I'm already running Black Diamond activated charcoal, which I put in there a couple of days ago. (I've got an AquaClear 200 filter with a sponge and, now, the carbon. There's room for another filter media in there.)
Do I need to use peat pellets? Or just will "squishy" peat work? And I definitely hear you about fluctuating pH being a lot worse than just leaving it alone. But Blue Rams are my dream fish, and back when I had a smaller tank and hauling bottled water was a possibility, they were wonderful. I'd sure like to get that back, if I could. Which means lower pH. Which means ... peat?
THANK YOU and I await your replies with unabated interest ...
-- Pat