Hello all,
This is my first post here on the forum and it was prompted when I saw some pictures smbjedi posted of his Discus.
They really are beautiful and seeing those pictures really tempts me. I kept Discus for about 15 years and quit about 3 years ago. My tank, a show 90, sat empty in my living room after I shut it down. A few months ago I got back into it but this time I went with live plants and some common Cichlids.
The Discus were just so much work. If I got lazy or had to travel and I missed a water change everything went to... well you know where it went. They were also very prone to disease. It's not that they are any harder to keep than anything else it's just that they are very unforgiving of mistakes or slip ups. I must have been doing something right though because a couple of my fish paired off and I managed to breed them in a standalone 29. It was a really interesting process to watch.
At the moment I am enjoying the plants and the complete absence of NO2 and NO3 thanks to the plants. An Ehiem canister with about a cup of PhosGuard once a week is keeping phosphates and thus algie under control. It circulates through the wet/dry sump under the tank.
But..... I sure do miss the beauty of the Discus I used to keep. Its really tempting to start keeping them again. But I really do enjoy seeing the pics other have of their Discus.
This is my first post here on the forum and it was prompted when I saw some pictures smbjedi posted of his Discus.
They really are beautiful and seeing those pictures really tempts me. I kept Discus for about 15 years and quit about 3 years ago. My tank, a show 90, sat empty in my living room after I shut it down. A few months ago I got back into it but this time I went with live plants and some common Cichlids.
The Discus were just so much work. If I got lazy or had to travel and I missed a water change everything went to... well you know where it went. They were also very prone to disease. It's not that they are any harder to keep than anything else it's just that they are very unforgiving of mistakes or slip ups. I must have been doing something right though because a couple of my fish paired off and I managed to breed them in a standalone 29. It was a really interesting process to watch.
At the moment I am enjoying the plants and the complete absence of NO2 and NO3 thanks to the plants. An Ehiem canister with about a cup of PhosGuard once a week is keeping phosphates and thus algie under control. It circulates through the wet/dry sump under the tank.
But..... I sure do miss the beauty of the Discus I used to keep. Its really tempting to start keeping them again. But I really do enjoy seeing the pics other have of their Discus.