WendyCT
New member
Hi, my son thought he was giving me the best gift of all for my 50th birthday a week ago and gave me a 10 gallon tank and a seahorse (something I have loved forever and had one day dreamed of "owning"). His intentions were lovely and well meaning but sadly I think he should of researched more and not just followed what the pet shop owner said because I think he was just hoping to sell things..
My son purchased a 10 gallon tank, some colorful pebble rocks for the bottom, a heater, a filter, frozen shrimp food, and the salt water salt. He set the tank up and in a few hours when the saturation was good he dripped into the seahorse "bucket" to acclimate it.
Sadly he did not allow the tank to cylce so that the bacteria (?) and ammonia/ph/etc could get to what they should be..
So I have been struggling with .25-.50 ammonia levels, 7.0 PH levels. I test two times a day. I have made several water changes over the past week (1/3of the tank water). Nothing seems to be working.
I feel horrible that the seahorse (he was told it was a captive bred hippocampus erectus) (spg) and was one of the hardier seahorses to start with. The little guy goes from looking uncomfortable (staying near the bottom of the tank, laying down) to swimming around, and anchoring up-right. He is a very good eater and gotton into the habit of coming to the top area of the tank where I put the food and hanging out in the past day and I'm wondering if he is hungry and knows that food will "appear" there?? I've been feeding him 2 x a day ..
I have also since purchased 2 live rocks, 3 small blue crabs, and have some tigger pods (which I've placed 1/3 of the bottle into the tank yesterday).
Can anyone tell me if there is anyway to get the ammonia level down more?
Also - should I have sand at the bottom of this tank and not small pebbles and seashells?
Is a 10 gallon tank large enough? The pet shop owner said it would do good for 1 or 2 seahorses but everything I am reading says it should be larger..?
It may sound silly but could the seahorse miss the other seahorse he use to be with at the pet store? There was only 2 of them there for the longest time... do they prefer to be social?
Any help would be so greatly appreciated. I want to do everything I can to make this little guy comfortable and happy in his environment and hopefully one day be able to add a 2nd so he is not alone.
Is there anyone out there who lives in CT and might want to share tips and help along this journey?
Thank you in advance to anyone who can take a few moments and help me out.
~Wendy
My son purchased a 10 gallon tank, some colorful pebble rocks for the bottom, a heater, a filter, frozen shrimp food, and the salt water salt. He set the tank up and in a few hours when the saturation was good he dripped into the seahorse "bucket" to acclimate it.
Sadly he did not allow the tank to cylce so that the bacteria (?) and ammonia/ph/etc could get to what they should be..
So I have been struggling with .25-.50 ammonia levels, 7.0 PH levels. I test two times a day. I have made several water changes over the past week (1/3of the tank water). Nothing seems to be working.
I feel horrible that the seahorse (he was told it was a captive bred hippocampus erectus) (spg) and was one of the hardier seahorses to start with. The little guy goes from looking uncomfortable (staying near the bottom of the tank, laying down) to swimming around, and anchoring up-right. He is a very good eater and gotton into the habit of coming to the top area of the tank where I put the food and hanging out in the past day and I'm wondering if he is hungry and knows that food will "appear" there?? I've been feeding him 2 x a day ..
I have also since purchased 2 live rocks, 3 small blue crabs, and have some tigger pods (which I've placed 1/3 of the bottle into the tank yesterday).
Can anyone tell me if there is anyway to get the ammonia level down more?
Also - should I have sand at the bottom of this tank and not small pebbles and seashells?
Is a 10 gallon tank large enough? The pet shop owner said it would do good for 1 or 2 seahorses but everything I am reading says it should be larger..?
It may sound silly but could the seahorse miss the other seahorse he use to be with at the pet store? There was only 2 of them there for the longest time... do they prefer to be social?
Any help would be so greatly appreciated. I want to do everything I can to make this little guy comfortable and happy in his environment and hopefully one day be able to add a 2nd so he is not alone.
Is there anyone out there who lives in CT and might want to share tips and help along this journey?
Thank you in advance to anyone who can take a few moments and help me out.
~Wendy