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Retirement and forum shutdown (17 Jan 2022)

Hi,

John Howell who has managed the forum for years is getting on and wishes to retire from the role of managing it.
Over the years, he has managed the forum through good days and bad days and he has always been fair.
He has managed to bring his passion for fish keeping to the forum and keep it going for so long.

I wish to thank John for his hard work in keeping the forum going.

With John wishing to "retire" from the role of managing the forum and the forum receiving very little traffic, I think we must agree that forum has come to a natural conclusion and it's time to put it to rest.

I am proposing that the forum be made read-only from March 2022 onwards and that no new users or content be created. The website is still registered for several more years, so the content will still be accessible but no new topics or replies will be allowed.

If there is interest from the ITFS or other fish keeping clubs, we may redirect traffic to them or to a Facebook group but will not actively manage it.

I'd like to thank everyone over the years who helped with forum, posted a reply, started a new topic, ask a question and helped a newbie in fish keeping. And thank you to the sponsors who helped us along the away. Hopefully it made the hobby stronger.

I'd especially like to thank John Howell and Valerie Rousseau for all of their contributions, without them the forum would have never been has successful.

Thank you
Darragh Sherwin

opinions on stocking level please

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03 Nov 2010 21:23 #1 by fourmations (NIall SMyth)
hi all

i have a planted 100l tank (36 x 12 x 15)
with a whopping big 900lph eheim
(actually tested at 900lph, not the usual quoted flow)

it currently houses..

15 x rasbora hengeli
7 x galaxies (cpds)
2 x oto
100+ red cherries

i was thinking of adding 10 x corydoras hastatus (tiny dwarf corys)

any thoughts? over doing it

rgds

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03 Nov 2010 21:41 #2 by stretnik (stretnik)
Replied by stretnik (stretnik) on topic Re:opinions on stocking level please
Don't see any main trouble other than the extra food load and I'd suggest redirection of flow of Water to get oxygen to the lower levels.

I have a Tank with the same dimensions give or take and there are about 50 Red Cherries, 40 Rummies, 12 Cardinals and 16 Pygmy Corydoras. The Tank has an External Eheim 300 and for added circulation a Fluval 3u, soley for breaking surface as I can't work out how the hell to set up the Spray Bar on the Eheim. Believe it or not, the Tank still looks emptyish.

Kev.

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03 Nov 2010 22:03 #3 by fourmations (NIall SMyth)
cheers kev

i dont get you about the redirection of flow as such
c. hastatus are more middle dwellers than bottom like normal corys

its a co2 injected tank so surface movement is there but not too much
i have a koralia nano in it as well although i havnt been running it recently

the spray bar is mounted at the side wall (the 12" wall)
so as you can imagine a 900lph filter running through a 12" spraybar
keeps a good flow going which hits the far wall and circulates downwards
running along the substrate

cheers

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03 Nov 2010 22:23 #4 by stretnik (stretnik)
Replied by stretnik (stretnik) on topic Re:opinions on stocking level please
Hi, the only reason I mention the Flow is to be sure, if you want to stock heavily, that all areas are in contact with moving Water in order to remove any uneaten Food and to ensure lower levels are sufficiently oxygenated to supply the Shrimp that usually prefer to be there. The Corys are fine and mine prefer to eat off the Bottom, while there , they aren't darting to the surface in order to gulp Air so the extra Water movement helps O2 to reach them and they get to feed, I find the Shrimp are heat seeking missiles where food is concerned and have watched them wrestle pellets etc from small bottom dwellers.

Hope that makes sense.

Kev.

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03 Nov 2010 23:27 #5 by platty252 (Darren Dalton)
4 why not do something a little diffrent.
Get rid of the henglie and replace them with 10 Aphyocharax paraguensis and 10 corydoras hastatus.
Both of these school together in the wild. They both have the same pattern at the tail.

Aphyocharax paraguensis has turned up a couple of times recently and are probably still available on the fish lists.

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03 Nov 2010 23:33 #6 by fourmations (NIall SMyth)
cheers kev

i get what you are saying and know a bit about flow, detritus & dead spots etc
(especially with the aul co2, ferts, highlight tank)

i cant see 10 inch long fish throwing the balance in my tank tbh
the tank is well filtered and the flow that comes with that
is quite well distributed......touch wood!

if you have 52 tetra i can see myself being overstocked! ;)

cheers

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03 Nov 2010 23:43 #7 by fourmations (NIall SMyth)
hi platy

funny you should say that

i have held the corys (well i think i have)
and the are in a tank with Aphyocharax paraguensis

when i enquired about the corys with the seller
he said they are in a tank with the Aphyocharax paraguensis
and all hanging out together

the Aphyocharax paraguensis seem a bit dull though
i was thinking of swapping my r. hengeli for something
brighter like chili rasboras or b. brigatte

do the Aphyocharax paraguensis colour up well
they remind me of the silvertip tetra i started with

ps. i shamelessly copy pasted Aphyocharax paraguensis from your post ;)

rgds

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03 Nov 2010 23:59 #8 by platty252 (Darren Dalton)
Do you have the A. paraguensis or are they been held in a shop for you?
If you have them and dont want them ill take them off you.

No they dont colour up. I kept some here for someone and i grew quite fond of them.

If you go for brigatte or similar stick to one species. They look better if they are not mixed.
I would also go for 20 or so.
Unfortunately they hang around in small groups and not one big school.

You could also look at Sawbwa resplendens. A group of all males would look great. But they are a bit shy.

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04 Nov 2010 00:35 #9 by murph (Tony Murphy)
FWIW, I have hasborus in a 180 with a pair of pelatus, a julli, ish (classic leopard cory description, not look like pictures....) and lots of pygmaeus. The pygmies tend to hang in the top with the rasboras. The hasborus stick down low. Despite everything else in the tank being fine (sturisoma have grown from 2" tiddlers to 10" with whiskers, pelatus spawn like clockwork) the hasborus have lost their barbells and die a lot. Everything else thrives.
Even Neons from the far east refuse to die!!!!


ME CONFUSED.


However, better to try than wonder.....





P.s. What I mean is, all the tiny corys tend to have mind of their own.
All are worth the effort. (Seahorse have some fab pygmaeus a.t.m. They need plants in quantity, but are so worth it!!!)



T.

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04 Nov 2010 00:45 #10 by fourmations (NIall SMyth)
hi murph

its hastatus we are talking about
i dont know if they differ from hasborous and pygmaeous
but apparently hastatus dont spend much time on the bottom
(this is just from reading, not practical experience!)

cheers

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04 Nov 2010 00:59 #11 by murph (Tony Murphy)
Hi, I know that, Pygmaeus behave far more like them. They look more like and behave more like hasborus, normally.
(Then again, my pygmaeus have finally managed to find the bottom of the tank as a pair of latacera curveceips were guarding eggs and terrorising everythig else, keeping them from their usual hunting ground. They must be desperate for food to dive that deep! (450mm))

Never a dull day.

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