Anyone here have freshwater planted tanks?

fishy_mcfish

New member
Was just wondering how many people with reef tanks have planted tanks as well? I was thinking of setting up a 20 long I have as either a freshwater planted tsnk or a saltwater macro algae tank. Still deciding
 
Go fresh...you have sweet RODI water but I hear fresh water planted tanks are a lot of work. [emoji848] following and good luck.
 
Yea if I go that route it would be a low tech setup for sure to help minimize the amount of work needed.


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i had one, with co2 n the works... had a 40gal ada setup, 6 months and ended up taking it down too much work... a lot of work... continuous trimming to keep the aquascape or else it'll start looking like a jungle, weekly water changes killed it for me...

now i just have a 5 gal low maintenance shrimp tank, i just let stuff grow like crazy so it looks like a jungle lol
 
I don't have one now, but had them in the past. They're awesome. They're very can and serene. My discus were constantly spawning. I think they can surpass reef tanks in beauty if done right. And since you are already in the habit of dealing with water parameters, you should be quite successful. The main things are a proper substrate and dissolving CO2 into your water.

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I have a 90g cube. I spent a bunch of money at the start for the proper soil, the co2 setup, the $100's of dollar Co2 glass diffuser. I setup mine with it's own RO System and a drain line. So 2x every day the RO system runs for 90 minutes for top off/water change.

Once I got the right plants, it became necessary every 2 weeks to go in with scissors and trim the the tank.

For the last 2 years I stopped the Co2, and stopped adding the plant additives. It's a jungle tank. But it's full of livebeares and some cardinals. There are 100's of different colored shrimp. And now I only have to trim the plants back about once a month. Unfortunately the Otocinculus are not good enough at keeping the glass clean so it still requries me to use a flipper to clean the glass every 2 or 3 weeks.

Dave B
 
I have a 90g cube. I spent a bunch of money at the start for the proper soil, the co2 setup, the $100's of dollar Co2 glass diffuser. I setup mine with it's own RO System and a drain line. So 2x every day the RO system runs for 90 minutes for top off/water change.

Once I got the right plants, it became necessary every 2 weeks to go in with scissors and trim the the tank.

For the last 2 years I stopped the Co2, and stopped adding the plant additives. It's a jungle tank. But it's full of livebeares and some cardinals. There are 100's of different colored shrimp. And now I only have to trim the plants back about once a month. Unfortunately the Otocinculus are not good enough at keeping the glass clean so it still requries me to use a flipper to clean the glass every 2 or 3 weeks.

Dave B



Do you have pics of the tank Dave? This another reason to make the drive out to your place to check out all your tanks! Haha


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they are nice tanks, research a little and you can keep plants that don't require constant trimming and replanting. stay away from stem plants if you dont want to trim often.
 
These are pics from July of 2016, taking Pics of plant is not as interesting as corals.

Fresh_1.png




Fresh_2.jpg



These are photos about 3 months in in 2014 - I spent a fortune on giant driftwood pieces that almost reached the surface and we haven't see the driftwood in years.

Fresh 1a.jpg




Fresh 1b.jpg





Fresh 1c.jpg



Dave B
 
I have been keeping FW tanks since I was a teenager. Reefs only a few years. My FW tanks are low tech with relatively easy, slow growing plants.

The angelfish tank (with cats) was once a hi tech tank with CO2 and lots of stem and other plants about 10 years ago. However, it was too much work to keep under control so I got rid of the CO2. I change ~20% of the wateronce a month or so. No fertilization at all other than by the fish and many years old compact fluorescent, 2 x 54w [MENTION=255083]500[/MENTION]0K and 2 x 54 watt @ 6500K. 2 x Eheim canister filters

The discus tank has only pool sand as a substrate with plant food tablets pushed into the root area. Lighting is 2 x 54w Giesmann Tropic and 2 x 54w Giesmann super Flora. No algae to speak of beyond some on the wood. It has been running about 2 years with a 40g breeder sump that contains quite a bit of siporax pond 3 x 200 micron mesh socks. I recently replaced 2 chambers of the Siporax with foam to try and reduce the debris on the remaining Siporax. Tank was just fed before the photo so some debris still floating around.

For me, FW is much easier than the reefs as they don't need much attention beyond water changes. No parameters to test or adjust for the most part.
 

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I have been keeping FW tanks since I was a teenager. Reefs only a few years. My FW tanks are low tech with relatively easy, slow growing plants.



The angelfish tank (with cats) was once a hi tech tank with CO2 and lots of stem and other plants about 10 years ago. However, it was too much work to keep under control so I got rid of the CO2. I change ~20% of the wateronce a month or so. No fertilization at all other than by the fish and many years old compact fluorescent, 2 x 54w [MENTION=255083]500[/MENTION]0K and 2 x 54 watt @ 6500K. 2 x Eheim canister filters



The discus tank has only pool sand as a substrate with plant food tablets pushed into the root area. Lighting is 2 x 54w Giesmann Tropic and 2 x 54w Giesmann super Flora. No algae to speak of beyond some on the wood. It has been running about 2 years with a 40g breeder sump that contains quite a bit of siporax pond 3 x 200 micron mesh socks. I recently replaced 2 chambers of the Siporax with foam to try and reduce the debris on the remaining Siporax. Tank was just fed before the photo so some debris still floating around.



For me, FW is much easier than the reefs as they don't need much attention beyond water changes. No parameters to test or adjust for the most part.



Nice looking tanks! So I can get away with just using sand as long as I supplement with plant food tablets pushed into the sand near the roots of plants?


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Nice looking tanks! So I can get away with just using sand as long as I supplement with plant food tablets pushed into the sand near the roots of plants?


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Thanks! It depends on the plants, but those that I have (Amazon swords, Valisneria, Cryptocorynes) have no problem with the sand substrate and fertilizer tablets (Seakem Flourish in my case). If you are interested in a few discus, PM me. I have too many.
 
Thanks! It depends on the plants, but those that I have (Amazon swords, Valisneria, Cryptocorynes) have no problem with the sand substrate and fertilizer tablets (Seakem Flourish in my case). If you are interested in a few discus, PM me. I have too many.



Just sent you a pm


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I have a 90g cube. I spent a bunch of money at the start for the proper soil, the co2 setup, the $100's of dollar Co2 glass diffuser. I setup mine with it's own RO System and a drain line. So 2x every day the RO system runs for 90 minutes for top off/water change.

Once I got the right plants, it became necessary every 2 weeks to go in with scissors and trim the the tank.

For the last 2 years I stopped the Co2, and stopped adding the plant additives. It's a jungle tank. But it's full of livebeares and some cardinals. There are 100's of different colored shrimp. And now I only have to trim the plants back about once a month. Unfortunately the Otocinculus are not good enough at keeping the glass clean so it still requries me to use a flipper to clean the glass every 2 or 3 weeks.

Dave B
Dave,

If you want a super red male bristlenose pleco to help with keeping the glass clean, I have one for you free of charge for all that you do for us SoCal reefers. I have a breeding colony in my cherry red neocaridina shrimp tank so he won't bother any of your shrimp. Full grown and about 4" long.
 
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