Hello, it’s me again. I did watch the discus lecture for beginners and realized I’m ALREADY knee deep in mistakes! Ah, how frustrating. I had really hoped to have a much more positive start to my very first time keeping and/or growing out discus, but here we are.
I hope it’s ok to keep a record here anyway. I hope to turn into one of those folks who ends up with a 125g of happy discus someday. We all start somewhere, right?
Also, howdy, any fellow Seattleites out there! Just wrapped up a real blue ribbon weekend at the GSAS auction! Got lots of shrimp for great prices as well as more jungle Val than I could reasonably shake a stick at. The tank has been up and running for a week now, so I guess I’ll talk about that first.
Filtration: starting off weak with a used Topfin Silentstream 75, which is honestly a piece of junk, but it fits filter media from my established Fluval canister on m other tank. For the time being it’s on max flow to get the (bacterial) juices going. I can turn it down later on. In addition to this, I’m running a XL Sponge filter with airstone from Aquarium Co-Op. I love this guy. Never used a sponge filter before and I feel like I’ve really been sleeping on them - they seem great. Still don’t trust them enough to go with them solo; and I do hate how much tank space they occupy.
Substrate:PNW playsand. I specify the region because I’ve noticed playsand is very, very different depending on where you live. In Louisiana our playsand was very light, fine, and had few particulates. Here it is dark and has a lot of gravelly looking stuff mixed in. I added Thrive root tabs (which as usual abandoned ship and floated up in spite of poking holes in them and squeezing out the air.
Inhabitants: Neocardina shrimp (about thirty) and two mystery snails, plus however many pest snails hitchhiked on the dang plants. The shrimp I got for ridiculously cheap and/or free (I have been collecting culls) so if they get eaten it’s totally fine; they’re mostly in there to help keep the tank as clean as possible and to produce enough waste that the bacteria from the used media doesn’t stall out.
Other stuff: I got a fluval gravel vac on sale! I have only ever used a siphon, so I’m not sure how well this guy will work. I am hoping the answer is “really well”, but I am prepared to deal with “meh”. I also finally found an adapter for my sink down here that fits the python, so potentially I can do WC much more seamlessly, unless I need to age my water, which takes me to my next point.
Water parameters:
KH 1
GH 4
TDS 80ppm
PH 7 (tap is 7.4, I think the wood has softened the water).
If you are still with me and aren’t ready to strangle me for making every beginner mistake in the book, I have a few questions.
1.) With a potential difference of .4 PH, do I need to age and aerate my water before WC?
2.) I was advised to consider doing a blackwater tank for discus - but that means adding leaves to add tannins to the water, which will make it much more difficult to clean the substrate. I’m going to assume the advice here will be “seriously, don’t do that”. Thoughts?
3.) Anyone have experience with “The Wet Spot” in Portland? They supply all the discus the LFS carry here. I think I’m just going to go with Golden State, unless someone has firsthand experience with this other place.
My plan is to let it sit now and let the plants do their thing for a while, while watching the PH/KH/GH/TDS like I do for my other shrimp tanks. I keep a journal for all my tanks so that shouldn’t be too bad. I guess now is the time to share a photo of how it looks, and I am frankly terrified because I’m certain I’ve done it all wrong.
And please excuse the ugly plastic apparatus if you can see it (preview is cropping it for me) - I use one of these on my goldfish tank to reduce mess when feeding, and I’d like to see if discus will eat out of it or if it’s too deep for their little faces. It’s curved and fairly shallow; it also has a corral at the top for floating foods.
I hope it’s ok to keep a record here anyway. I hope to turn into one of those folks who ends up with a 125g of happy discus someday. We all start somewhere, right?
Also, howdy, any fellow Seattleites out there! Just wrapped up a real blue ribbon weekend at the GSAS auction! Got lots of shrimp for great prices as well as more jungle Val than I could reasonably shake a stick at. The tank has been up and running for a week now, so I guess I’ll talk about that first.
Filtration: starting off weak with a used Topfin Silentstream 75, which is honestly a piece of junk, but it fits filter media from my established Fluval canister on m other tank. For the time being it’s on max flow to get the (bacterial) juices going. I can turn it down later on. In addition to this, I’m running a XL Sponge filter with airstone from Aquarium Co-Op. I love this guy. Never used a sponge filter before and I feel like I’ve really been sleeping on them - they seem great. Still don’t trust them enough to go with them solo; and I do hate how much tank space they occupy.
Substrate:PNW playsand. I specify the region because I’ve noticed playsand is very, very different depending on where you live. In Louisiana our playsand was very light, fine, and had few particulates. Here it is dark and has a lot of gravelly looking stuff mixed in. I added Thrive root tabs (which as usual abandoned ship and floated up in spite of poking holes in them and squeezing out the air.
Inhabitants: Neocardina shrimp (about thirty) and two mystery snails, plus however many pest snails hitchhiked on the dang plants. The shrimp I got for ridiculously cheap and/or free (I have been collecting culls) so if they get eaten it’s totally fine; they’re mostly in there to help keep the tank as clean as possible and to produce enough waste that the bacteria from the used media doesn’t stall out.
Other stuff: I got a fluval gravel vac on sale! I have only ever used a siphon, so I’m not sure how well this guy will work. I am hoping the answer is “really well”, but I am prepared to deal with “meh”. I also finally found an adapter for my sink down here that fits the python, so potentially I can do WC much more seamlessly, unless I need to age my water, which takes me to my next point.
Water parameters:
KH 1
GH 4
TDS 80ppm
PH 7 (tap is 7.4, I think the wood has softened the water).
If you are still with me and aren’t ready to strangle me for making every beginner mistake in the book, I have a few questions.
1.) With a potential difference of .4 PH, do I need to age and aerate my water before WC?
2.) I was advised to consider doing a blackwater tank for discus - but that means adding leaves to add tannins to the water, which will make it much more difficult to clean the substrate. I’m going to assume the advice here will be “seriously, don’t do that”. Thoughts?
3.) Anyone have experience with “The Wet Spot” in Portland? They supply all the discus the LFS carry here. I think I’m just going to go with Golden State, unless someone has firsthand experience with this other place.
My plan is to let it sit now and let the plants do their thing for a while, while watching the PH/KH/GH/TDS like I do for my other shrimp tanks. I keep a journal for all my tanks so that shouldn’t be too bad. I guess now is the time to share a photo of how it looks, and I am frankly terrified because I’m certain I’ve done it all wrong.
And please excuse the ugly plastic apparatus if you can see it (preview is cropping it for me) - I use one of these on my goldfish tank to reduce mess when feeding, and I’d like to see if discus will eat out of it or if it’s too deep for their little faces. It’s curved and fairly shallow; it also has a corral at the top for floating foods.
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