ACBlinky
Premium Member
I'm having a pretty major problem with my wrists and right shoulder ATM (severe tendonitis that has REALLY flared up over the last few weeks) and it's affecting my ability to look after my tanks. I could use some ideas from everyone on how to deal with this.
I usually use a large powerhead to move water from tank to bucket, bucket to sink in order to do water changes, and have my hubby lug the buckets around. Right now, that's too much to ask of my hands. Even pushing the Mag-Float across the glass is extremely painful. To be honest, just sitting her looking at the screen is painful.
I don't want my tank(s) to slide downhill - I'm normally pretty fastidious about maintenance, but it's been six weeks since the last water change (we replaced over 50% of the water in both tanks when we moved house September 1st) and though levels are great, I'm worried about things like trace nutrients and Ca/alk/Mg getting out of balance.
Right now only the front glass of the 90g is getting cleaned about every three days - I'm not bothering with the back and sides, and they're getting greener by the day (powdery green algae). The filter sock is being changed every 24-48h because no matter how much pain I'm in, one of us HAS to do that and empty the skimmer; I insist on that much. The tank has gone through a small GHA bloom, and has some cyano in the sump right now; moving house caused it to re-cycle and it's just settling down. Now we've got a lot of powdery stuff on the glass. The 30g is less of a problem (lighter bioload) but still gets green without a good sweep of the magnet every few days.
We dose 1g of kalk every other day (it amounts to about 1/6 of the make-up water), and levels are good - NH3, NO2, NO3 & PO4 are all 0, KH was about 13dKH last time I checked it (though I had recently added buffer), Ca about 400ppm. The fish look great.
So is it okay to leave things be for a while, should I tough it through a water change (my hubby can't do it by himself), should I reduce feedings? Any other creative ideas? Unfortunately hiring someone isn't really an option - we can't really afford it, and there may not even be anyone in this (small) city that I'd trust messing with my tanks anyway
It's too bad - I can get a program on my computer to type most of the words for me when I talk; if only I could use this technology to do a water change! 
TIA for any ideas guys, this is driving me nuts.
I usually use a large powerhead to move water from tank to bucket, bucket to sink in order to do water changes, and have my hubby lug the buckets around. Right now, that's too much to ask of my hands. Even pushing the Mag-Float across the glass is extremely painful. To be honest, just sitting her looking at the screen is painful.
I don't want my tank(s) to slide downhill - I'm normally pretty fastidious about maintenance, but it's been six weeks since the last water change (we replaced over 50% of the water in both tanks when we moved house September 1st) and though levels are great, I'm worried about things like trace nutrients and Ca/alk/Mg getting out of balance.
Right now only the front glass of the 90g is getting cleaned about every three days - I'm not bothering with the back and sides, and they're getting greener by the day (powdery green algae). The filter sock is being changed every 24-48h because no matter how much pain I'm in, one of us HAS to do that and empty the skimmer; I insist on that much. The tank has gone through a small GHA bloom, and has some cyano in the sump right now; moving house caused it to re-cycle and it's just settling down. Now we've got a lot of powdery stuff on the glass. The 30g is less of a problem (lighter bioload) but still gets green without a good sweep of the magnet every few days.
We dose 1g of kalk every other day (it amounts to about 1/6 of the make-up water), and levels are good - NH3, NO2, NO3 & PO4 are all 0, KH was about 13dKH last time I checked it (though I had recently added buffer), Ca about 400ppm. The fish look great.
So is it okay to leave things be for a while, should I tough it through a water change (my hubby can't do it by himself), should I reduce feedings? Any other creative ideas? Unfortunately hiring someone isn't really an option - we can't really afford it, and there may not even be anyone in this (small) city that I'd trust messing with my tanks anyway
TIA for any ideas guys, this is driving me nuts.