I had a friend call me the other day regarding some issues that she was having with her fabulously-equipped, obscenely expensive 300 gallon planted community tank. She’s got the usual littany of tech toys- high end German canister filter, CO2 reactors, turbo-charged external powerheads, and a killer electronic controller that would make NASA jealous. Â Seemed like all was good and that she should be at the top of her game with her 10k plus investment. Yet, for some reason, her system just didn’t look right. Plants seemed off-color, fish were listless, and the system just didn’t look “right."
We went through the usual questions: “Any new fishes added recently?” , “Dose any additives?”, “When was the last time you did a water change?”….As it turned out, she felt that her super high-tech system made her exempt from basic husbandry practices…Not only had it been literally months since she did a water change, it had been an equal number of months since she checked the probes on her controller! One of the controller’s probes cracked, and the pH probe was not even submersed in the water! For all of her techno-props, my friend overlooked some basic tenants of aquarium-keeping: 1) You can’t blindly rely on gadgets to control your system without glancing at them occasionally to ascertain if they are working or not, and 2) You need to adhere to some very basic husbandry practices- such as water changes, to dilute metabolic waste products.
Basic stuff, yes- but vital if we are to enjoy long-term success with captive animals. I’m frequently blown away how seemingly "advanced" hobbyists tend to overlook the most basic aspects of aquariology- observation of their systems and attention to regular husbandry. Spend less time shopping for that crazy rare fish and some more time looking at your aquarium! Return to the basic “core” experience of keeping an aquarium, and get involved with your system on a more intimate level.
Get your hands wet!
Today's simple discussion of discipline, growth, and doing the obvious.
Scott Fellman
Tannin Aquatics
Scott Fellman
Author