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-   -   Confused, new to fish keeping (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=64434)

  • Jun 11, 2007, 01:14 PM
    AKaeTrue
    You truly have some great finds!!
    I do believe your right about both fish.
    As a matter of fact, after comparing pic's, I know you are!
    I found this about the blue johanni
    That's awesome daisy! I've never seen or heard of those fish.
    I really think they are beautiful!

    I'm really glad everyone's getting along.
    That's really good news.
  • Jun 11, 2007, 04:30 PM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    Thanks, I think their pretty neat looking, too. My brother says that his is the most aggressive one in the tank. I'll have to look for the fish food you suggested. I wrote it down and the paper is in my wallet. When I clean my tank, I only clean the gravel, and the hoods, although my tank is fairly new. I clean the filter like once a month. It doesn't look like there is algae growing in it yet. I would think there would be, though, since I have the plant lights on it. I think I read somewhere that you could stick a piece of zucchini squash in the tank and let it float for the cichlids that eat veggies too. I couldn't tell you where I saw it though.
  • Jun 11, 2007, 04:43 PM
    AKaeTrue
    Does your yellow fish have any black on it's fins?
  • Jun 11, 2007, 04:46 PM
    AKaeTrue
    does it look like this
  • Jun 11, 2007, 05:06 PM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    It has a black line on the top fin, but it is really light. The bottom fin doesn't have black on it, it looks more white, and it looks like there is an egg spot on it. I never looked that close before at the bottom fin.
  • Jun 12, 2007, 12:27 PM
    AKaeTrue
    The reason I asked is because the picture in post 198 doesn't look like he has a black line like the electric yellows. From what I can see of him it looked a lot like my male blue kenyi which is bright yellow.
  • Jun 12, 2007, 12:53 PM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    Could be. They came from the same tank. Although it's been the same color since I bought him and that was a couple months ago. He's twice his size now then when I got him.
  • Jun 12, 2007, 01:02 PM
    AKaeTrue
    Lol, well they do change from blue to yellow while they are very small and as they grow they lose the black altogether.
    It would be fun to watch to see if his black stripe fully disapears...
    From the baby pic's, looks like there was a thick black stripe that's not there anymore... hum interesting.
  • Jun 12, 2007, 04:30 PM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    I took another picture of him, and he doesn't look like he has that stripe in the picture either. I'll put it up another time, because the picture is on a different computer than I'm at right now.
  • Jun 13, 2007, 01:24 PM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    1 Attachment(s)
    hi
  • Jun 13, 2007, 02:45 PM
    AKaeTrue
    WOW! That looks just like my male blue kenyi!
  • Jun 13, 2007, 02:50 PM
    AKaeTrue
    It could be a female electric yellow, they have less black and no black bottom fins.
    But from this pic, you can't see any black on the top one either..
  • Jun 13, 2007, 03:28 PM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    It probably is a kenyi then. Someone at work told me that if it is and they have babies she wants some. She said she never had any and would love to have a different type of fish, but she's too cheap to buy some (her words not mine). :D

    Someone gave me a 20 gal. long tank. Do you think the plecos would be okay in that for a while? I was planning on putting the tank in my room, and I want to make it some type of community tank. But, alas, I am clueless (sort of). What type of fish would you recommend, and would it need a heater? I was thinking of a few fan-tailed guppies. That is really the only things I can think of that I would need to know, since I only have experience with the fish I have, and that's really not much experience at that.
  • Jun 13, 2007, 06:43 PM
    AKaeTrue
    Hehe... I have a 20 gal long!!
    I have 2 dojoe? Loaches, 5 neon tetra, 5 cardinal tetra, 2 male guppies, 3 female guppies, and 2 sunset platies.

    I run a 10 gal heater and keep the water at 76.

    I think the plecos would be fine in there for now while they're small.

    Small tetras, guppies, platies, and mollies, are some colorful choices that would do real good in there.
  • Jun 13, 2007, 08:09 PM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    I could only find the cichlid attack at petco, so I'll have to look at petsmart. They said they stopped getting the other one in recently. Do you still give them flakes with it or do you just give them the pellets to eat? I thought I put a lot in, and it says to feed them whatever they can eat within 3 min. Well, what I put in only took them about 30 seconds to devour.

    Ooh, I was at petco, and they had some crabs. Little ones that get to like 2.5 inches. I was so tempted to get one. I was afraid he would crawl out of the tank, though, and die BEHIND it. EWW! That would be nasty. :D

    I really like some of the colors on the male guppies. That's why I was thinking them, but I sort of like the black mollies, too.
  • Jun 13, 2007, 08:49 PM
    AKaeTrue
    I don't feed flakes once they are big enough to eat the pellets (to the cichlids anyway) so that their teeth stay healthy and grinded down.

    I feed both the attack and the spirulina to the African cichlids at the same time, it's like eating meat and veggies - LOL. They love it! But that's the only 2 things I feed them.
    I feed them a lot too. And a few times a day at that. I feel they need it
    To grow and for good color, plus an unhungry African is less aggressive.

    I've never kept a crab before, but they might surprise you.
    I've heard that they are very good at catching the fish in their pinchers and eating them... but that's just something I've heard and don't know if it's true or even possible.

    You can keep guppies and mollies together.
    They get along with each other well.
    They both have live babies too, no eggs.
    It's pretty cool.
  • Jun 13, 2007, 09:16 PM
    nanajo1
    Akae why do you have a oscar in a salt water tank? Not good by any means
    I'm surprised the poor thing is still alive. If your oscar is that large it should be in a tank no less than 50 g now.
    Crazy, your tank should not be as full of algae as it is, you need to put in a better form of filtration in it. If you are wanting to breed these chiclids they should be in a 20 g or more tank. Supply them with plenty of hiding spaces. You should never have more than 1 pair of breeding parents in a tank of 10 - 20 g at one time. If you put in too many they will fight and kill each other. The female of the breed that you have are notorious for killing the males once they are finished with them so you have to keep an eye on them.

    Clean the tank out once the babies have been transferred when they are old enough. Becareful not to transfer them to early because the babies eat off the slime on the parents bodies. Algae buildup like you are describing often happens as a result of overfeeding, over stocking and poor water filtration. One thing that you can put into your larger tank is a power head which allows for more water movement which areorates the water giving the fish and tank itself more oxygen. Do not put the tank too close to a heating element such as rad or near a window where the sun comes in constantly. I have been breeding and caring for chiclids for over 20 years so if you ever have a question, let me know. I also have salt water tanks and a sea horse tank
  • Jun 14, 2007, 12:38 AM
    chaplain john
    Hello all
    I've been enjoying reading your posts here. I kept fish for a number of years when My wife, I and our girls were younger(considerably). It seems that the basics have changed a little but the common sense approach still holds true. When we kept fish I quickly learned to change out a quarter or so of the water once a month but never quite understood why it worked so well... Now I understand better... Thank you.

    Reading your posts has made me consider putting up the extra deposit my apartment complex requires and starting a tank again.

    I have to pass along an anecdote about killing a poor fish with kindness.

    A number of years ago we started our first community tank on doctors orders. My doctor recommended it as therapy for my ulcer problem (I can watch a tank for about half an hour and relax so much that you almost have to pour me out of my easy chair). As part of this community tank my wife selected a fancy Black Moor Goldfish. It was introduced to the tank with no problems at all until a friend gave us a pretty little Beta Splendens which took a very aggressive stance with the Moor.

    During the time leading up to the acquisition of these two fish I had been reading and decided, since we lived in a large drafty old house on the Oregon coast and had some problems with Ick and some other problems brought on by our accommodations, a small treatment tank was in order. I bought glass and silicon and built a tank that would hold one gallon of water to be used for treatment purposes. One gallon for ease in measuring proper dosages.

    Meanwhile back in the main tank... The Beta had become more aggressive toward the poor Moor and had, in it's attacks removed a number of scales from the Moor's sides and the Moor seemed to be suffering. Well humanitarian that I was back then I decided to move the Moor to the treatment tank and add medications that the book I had recommended for the problem at hand. When the process was finished I placed a spare heater, which had already been tested and set to hold 78 to 80 degrees, I had in the small tank. We went to bed knowing that all had been done to make the Moor comfortable and start the healing process.

    Next morning we woke up to find the poor Moor floating belly up in the small tank. It seems that I overlooked the fact that the sensor unit of the heater was not far enough into the water to shut off the element when the water reached the right temp. This happened over thirty years ago and I have yet to live down the fact that I cooked my better half's favorite fish.

    Moral: If you're going to build a treatment tank make darn sure that the depth is sufficient to get the heater into it deep enough to operate properly.

    AK I would like to know a little more about using the bacterium sponge set up. Do you set it up in a separate filter system without using all the other filter elements?
  • Jun 14, 2007, 06:42 AM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    Would black moors be OK in the tank with the mollies and guppies? I would rather not even try the crabs because I was thinking that, too, that they would easily grab the other fish. I should look them up. If they would do good in ten gallons I could sometime set that up and put them in there. Since I have three of them now. The lady who gave me the 20 also gave me a 10 with all the works.
  • Jun 14, 2007, 06:01 PM
    CrazyDaisyLou
    Nanajo,

    AKaeTrue never said she put her oscar in saltwater. The only time she even mentioned saltwater was when I didn't explain my fish well enough and she thought they might be a different kind.


    chaplain john,

    Thanks for the story! :D You just helped me reaffirm that I won't ever make my own tank, because no matter how much thought I will put into it, I know something will go wrong. You have asked the right person for the information you are seeking. She has knowledge in a lot of things to do with fish and tanks.

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