Are you no longer in CO? Water in CO & NM is so **hard** and has soooo much calcium and other minerals, I **have** to keep hornwort so the rest of the plants do well. :/
@@Lazy_Fish_Keeper I'm still in CO, but they treat our water with a process that raises the pH and softens the water. So I have to add back in minerals for my animals and plants.
@@GirlTalksFish Colorado Springs water leaves massive residue in the tub... but now that I think about it, I don't remember seeing calcium deposits on the spigots like we have in NM🤔 The water here is so hard, 4 gallons is wasted for every gallon of RO. So RO really is not cost effective.
Thank you! I was listening to a podcast where an aquascaper was being interviewed and said that many of his fellow aquascapers will scrap an entire scape if algae starts growing out of control and just restart the aquarium setup. So we never get to see many of the behind-the-scenes disasters. 😛
@@GirlTalksFish Thanks for this video. I didn't realize I could / should massively turn down my lighting. Sent me off in a whole new area to investigate.
@@red_nullhugo4045 in a low light setup I’d say to do the recommended dosing for your tank size once a week and for medium to high light do something like one full dose a week with a half a dose in the middle or two full doses during the week. If you aren’t using in all in one you could probally dose a full dies of macros then dose half of the micros depending on your plant density.
Just recently discovered the struggle that is cyanobacteria. It was a long, drawn out struggle rife with colorful language, moments of staring at my aquarium wondering if crying would help, and sleepless moments contemplating finding a less complicated hobby such as freelance biochemical engineering or dinosaur cloning. Glad I stuck with it, though. Not sure anyone would appreciate me walking a Velociraptor around the local dog park.
Hey Johnny, glad to hear you stuck with it! What ended up working for you? I had a bout of cyanobacteria, defeated it and now it's slowly peaking back.
@@courtneykeeps Howdy Courtney. I started by manually scraping and scrubbing as much as I could, did a big water change to siphon out as much as possible , and then started treating my tank with "API Erythromycin". I also cut back on my lighting, cut down on feedings, did extra water changes, and got in the habit of bleach treating my cleaning equipment between uses. It took me months to get it under control and it did try to creep back on me a few times during that time. Not sure if everything I did was necessary, but I haven't had problems with it for around six months now. Hope this helps!
Wow. This is LITERALLY my exact situation. Have a fluval 3.0, been running Bentley's light schedule, do not run CO2 and hair algae is everywhere. This was VERY helpful. Thank you so much!
This video sums ALL the reasons why you are one of my very favorite channels, Irene! Wow, I needed this video. Been trying to balance my 100g for a year, and would never have thought about the potassium and my Colorado soft water as possible culprits (& how all-in-ones may not be complete for soft water). Already watched twice and saving to watch later again - all the chart links and kit links are so helpful! You’re the best!
I kinda like green algae when it grows on the back, it makes a realistic green background that makes the tank look nice imo, kinda with saltwater how the light makes the tank look blue, but in fresh the green algae makes the tank look green.
I know I'm a year late, and everyone already mentioned it, but what an amazing video and instructions. This literally made me feel happy about maintaining my fish tank, and tackling problems that undoubtfully will arise. Thank you for being different :)
This video is one of the most helpful I’ve seen on plants. I’m wanting to create a beautifully planted large tank and I’m sick of killing plants and fighting algae.
Your approach non setting the lowest light level then adjusting nutrients . While changing one thing at a time is brilliant and so well thought out. Ty!!!!!!❤
So I'm definitely a noob and didn't do things properly, didn't cycle my tank properly. Had a noobie aquarium emergency. I'm so much smarter now but my nitrites keep going up. I have 4 neon tetras 4 shrimp and 2 khuli loaches. My lil guys have been absolute troopers and have all survived. Your videos have helped me so much. I was a bad fish dad but now I'm much smarter. Thank you!!!
Enjoyed the video explanation. Wish I had YT instructions back in the day. Lots of trial and error over the years until Internet forums and videos started helping me. Glad the hobby is still going strong and influencing others. Thank you from a fellow planted tanker 👍😎
Finally, an in depth video on this. I have set up several algae farms in past, due to not knowing how to balance my nutrients/light/CO2. Thank you for this!
I've kept a planted tank for a little over a year now. If I had this much trouble I would have quit! I've only encountered a bit of hair algae and it made me want to pull my hair out! I'm impressed by your perseverance and willingness to spend so much time and money (on test kits) to sort out your imbalance. Great, informative, beautiful video!
Very thorough for short vid, one of the best I've seen on tank balancing. Irene's frankness is always to the point and very useful, and editing is spot on.
I completely sympathize with your issues. I know them all.... my 125-g and two 75-g tanks were completely covered with green hair algae for months ( and they all have CO2 injection, Fluval 3.0 light and Fluval Stratum aqua soil). Finally, I bought 50 Siamese algae eaters and 50 Florida Flagfish (cost a fortune) for these tanks. Within 3 weeks, 90% of the hair algae and black beard algae was completely consumed in all three tanks! I have resisted the idea of getting these fish for the longest time because I find them “too plain” looking in my rainbow, angelfish and tetra tanks. But they absolutely saved my plants! I have tried EVERYTHING with no success. Now they are my favorite fish!
Most of the time I don’t need to watch your videos but they’re still so fun to watch. I feel like you’re talking to us as a friend at Starbucks ranting about your aquarium, instead of being very stern and never seem like you’re having fun or enjoying yourself.
Thank you for this video. I too was growing an algae farm. I tried everything from testing the water to full on peroxide dips and nothing worked. I finally just lowered my lights about 90-95% and just left it alone for a couple of weeks. The tank was dimly lit and was afraid my plants might die. To my surprise, all the algae just started shedding and my plants were growing like crazy. My driftwood and rocks also lost all of their algae too. Lately, I've been testing a high light period of about 1 and a half hours to help my reds with the rest of the day being relatively low at around 15-25%. Water changes are 20 percent every week and 40-50% every two weeks. Again, thank you for these videos!
I’ve been struggling with figuring out this balance for years! This is the first video I’ve found that is relatable and practically understandable. Thank you so much!!
Omg thank you so much for making this video it took me almost one year to learn why my planted tank has tons of algae and melting plants but now slowly plants started to grow now but I still have leaves with brown patches now I know why I have them.
This makes it so much easier to understand. I was very disappointed in my tanks last year where everything went wrong. I definitely want to try again after this vid.
Please ignore all the hate you get, your doing a really amazing job 😁. Your videos are really helpful for me to learn more about my fish and plants and what I love most about your videos is that you ain’t scared to share your mistakes (as everyone makes mistakes but some won’t admit it lol) and from mistakes we learn from them to approve next time
Your videos are hands down the best fish keeping videos out there. I was JUST thinking this week about the question of how to balance a tank. Everyone says “balance the tank” but has never explained it. THANK YOU!
Wow. It's way more complicated than I'd thought! I guess that's why I only seem to be able to grow anubia, java moss, and of course - algae of all varieties!! I'm not sure I have your dedication and patience for it but your tank does look AMAZING now - what a difference.
So glad the algorithm brought me to you! New Walstad tanker here 👋. I somehow followed your exact pathway, from Fluval 3.0 Plant to Bentleys’s model. Fortunately I found this video before algae kicked in!
This video was amazing. You took a concept that us beginners don't know well enough and broke it down expertly. My one criticism was going to be, "You used test kits but never said what they were!" but then I looked at the description and saw that you linked to them. Fantastic. Thank you so much.
huh....I couldn't follow the information at all. I can't regulate my light levels except lowing the time I have my lights on. Also, I'm just not into doing research into which nutrients to make different plants do well. Maybe some day but I just now want my fish to be healthy for now.
I appreciate your video! I lucked out and just threw a bunch of plants and seeds in an aquarium with the fluval light and never had an issuefor over a year. I did a major plant cut back and all of these problems started. Now I'm doing water changes, ordering test kits, and water additives! Thanks.
This was a great video. I've been doing planted tanks for years and balancing things has mostly been a "trial and error + survival of the fittest" thing for me. While that method works great and I don't have to do hardly anything to maintain those tanks, I have little control over how they end up looking, and aquascaping isn't really an option. I think this info will help me with future builds when I want to try something a little more difficult than "toss plants in water and see what survives."
You’re very good at explaining things properly! Especially the processes. I’ve had that same top fin 5 gallon tank for about six years now and it’s still running great. A separate plug for the light is the only gripe, cause it can’t be put on a timer. Still a great tank nonetheless!
Great video, thanks for sharing what you learned. For years, I've been big on the idea of minimal water changes (cheap and lazy are my hallmarks for fishkeeping) in a planted tank following the Walstad method. In the end, I gave up. Things that worked well for me: Soil substrate, capped with black sand and gravel (didn't bother with the wash/dry mineralizing process) No water tests, lazy, but I know what my tap water is like. Twice a week water changes for first 2-3months, then weekly 50% water changes. Occasional DIY equilibrium (bought 1lb of eachMgSO4 + CaCl2 + CaSO4, lasts years) for GH coz of my soft water. Whatever LED light, no dimmer, 12 hours No EI/PMDD ferts, just occasional Flourish. Excel daily for algae control (coz my light hours are long, I like to see my tank). Canister filter (somehow algae likes to grow when I tried sponge filters). Livestock are fancy guppies, RCS, a few Otos. Plants that do well in my low tech setup are Crypts, Java Fern, Anubias. The key for algae control (for me) really isn't "when plants grow well, they outcompete algae" crap (sounds great when you're writing a book) but water changes and maintenance (learned that from Green Aqua YT channel).
I don't comment often on YT videos but wanted to say this video is EXTREMELY well done. Great examples and reasoning and we have good editing I never felt lost leading to one step to the next. You do a great job explaining why everyone tanks will be different on algae issues many need to understand not everyone can yield same results with the same formula we need to sometimes tweak things to what helps us why I love this hobby its trial and error.
People can call someone anything they like, you actually went to the bottom of the problem, or tried to go as far as possible, testing everything ting what could. Just for that : congrats to yourself. Second of all, your point is totally the most important one : stabilizing means changing things little by little, without rushing and by observing every time you change something. 👌👌👌👍👍👍
So glad I came across your videos just before I set up my tanks for two new bettas! The problem I’m having is leaves dissolving, no planting substrate only epiphytes
I watched this before starting my aquarium, but now Ive had mine running for about 3 weeks now with a variety of plants. this week I noticed my Anubis, has got 1 decent dark spot that has now become a hole and my Anubis coin is starting to get some translucent leaves. I'm so glad I came back to your video. At the moment I only have a few snails so It makes sense my nitrogen is low, but I didn't realize how much of an effect it had on the plants. I also had no idea I needed/ didn't have enough potassium. Hopefully adding some in can help get them happy again but I get fish added in. Thanks a lot from including everything in the description!
Defiantly the best video about balancing a tank! Thank you! I'd love to see a video on your maintenance for this tank too, like when you do tests and what tests etc.
Thank you! I'll have to do an updated video on how I clean this tank. In the meanwhile, here's a video on how I clean my planted betta tank, which is similar: ruclips.net/video/W3VV_c69CyQ/видео.html
As always brilliant video! I spent 9 months battling BBA, but now it’s gone from my 200 litre planted tank. I religiously do 50% water change at least once a week, have shorter but brighter 6 hours of lighting, I found even with dim lighting that’s on for 8-10 hours the tank became an algae farm. Make you tank maintenance as easy as possible (for example get some hose and a pump for water changes) so it’s more enjoyable rather than just a chore, then you will more likely keep it up and not skip a week.
Nice video, was a newbie at one time to planted tanks. I am a firm believer in every tank is different,some plants won’t grow in any of my tanks. Others flower and grow incredibly well. People need to try different plants and see what works.
Irene! So timely! I am experiencing this exact issue. I starting getting green hair algae and it’s spreading from plants to my dragon rock. I thought maybe I should cut back on light and or my all in one fert. I started dosing liquid CO2, sure the hair algae burned off, but I’m sure it will come back. Like you said my tank is cloudy, hahaha. This is in my 15gallon Fluval flex. I also have tropica aquarium soil for some substrate nutrients. I used to run a 60 gallon set up with just CO2, no ferts, no nutrient rich plant substrate and honestly everything thrived and no algae issues other than the standard source algae for my Otos. You video is the most optimal timing for me! Thank you for all of your hard work on your videos and all the research you have do!
You learn the yourself, fertilizers only help the people who are selling them they're really not needed for the most part that's why you have fish there your fertilizer including the food you're feeding them! Nobody's dosing fertilizer out in nature and that's what your tank is at least with fish in it!🤭😉😇
@@bigjay1970 thank you! That’s very true! I think when the fert is done I’ll just go back to my old ways of C02 and let the natural fertilizer from fish and food so it’s job. Thank you for your validating comments!
Wow! I had the same issues with the Fluval 3.0 and low tech non co2 injection. I used Bentley’s method for the light too. I raised the light for better spread of light and dialed it down to 50% during peak times. Thanks for the great video!
Thank you so much, Irene. I am such a newbie. Set up my first planted tank in December. Its such a steep learning curve, lol. But you help me more than anyone. I really appreciate it. Also, you (and Ryo Watanabe) have inspired me to get a betta. He's gorgeous, and I hope I do well by him.
I had the same green hair algae problem with the same light! My solution was trim the algae as much as I could, then 40% light, 12 hrs a day, in a 24” deep tank. Heavily planted, lightly stocked.
Hugely helpful and well produced video. I am still struggling with black beard algae in my 75 gallon Rio Negro biome planted tank aquarium with CO2 injection while my Amazon swords and red cabomba weren't doing well. You have convinced me to reduce my lighting and increase my fish feeding to get the nitrates up. I was very proud of having 0 ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate. I will now be happy to see 20 nitrate.
Very helpful. You have given me some ideas. I am still trying to "Balance" my planted tank . Something that I have learned along the way is that cryptocoryne plants cannot process Nitrates. That will be why your crypts melted. They can't tolerate Nitrates. Take care.
Thank you, Irene, for going the extra mile and a half to cover the triad of plant needs. I discovered the same issues with fast vs. slow growing, who was gobbling up nutrients and why. Maybe the plant keepers can encourage vendors to add nutrients to their tank parameter care guides. Yep, it's extra work for them, but the payoff is more sales from us.
Great video, thanks for sharing. I have a simple set-up like yours and was able to solve some balance problems by putting lights on a 4 hour "rest" period during the day. eg 4 hours on, 4 hours off 4 hours on. The plants will produce carbon dioxide in the off period. I had less algae, and plant nutrient deficiencies issues resolved.
I set up my tanks with some easy plants, and I put Watersprite in the tank, give it a few weeks, watersprite grows so quickly and absorbs so many nutrients it takes about 2-3 weeks to get it into balnce and it clears up. I also use beamswork 10k led lights. I also hang on a power filter in addition to my sponge filters for a few weeks.
Thank you so much for the video. It's been very helpful for my plants in my tank. Never did live plants before. And I was having all of the same problems. The leaf chart is awesome. I have been able to narrow down what is going on to have a thriving live plant tank. Thank you so much.😊
This video helped me out so much when I first started the hobby, a little over a year ago! Had to come back and like and subscribe! Took me some trial and error to get a feel for the balance with my plants (and melt...oh all the melting). It would've taken a lot longer without informative videos like this! Thank you and keep up the great work!
Another great video! Love it!! Just wanted to add that to fight algae, let the plants do the work for you. All you need to do is to add lots of fast growing plants.
Thank you so much! I have watched a few of your videos in the past, this is the one that made me click subscribe. I’m so sick of researching this topic and only getting the jerks that call names or act like you shouldn’t be part of the hobby. Obviously people are trying to learn and they should take a lesson from you and be helpful and kind to people seeking answers or they should stay off the internet. Thank you so so much for finally answering my questions
This was a very well explained video that I know will help me and my tank, I’ve been trying to get the light balance, fertiliser balance for awhile now, so all of this is food for thought. I will watch this again soon so I can refresh and reference back to it. Thank you! Steve.
I love this! I’m also a beginner with planted tanks and I never knew how to go about “balancing” my tank. So I have the opposite obstacles as you, basic FluvalSmart aqua sky light, very hard water with very high phosphate! Still I’m constantly growing the same algae you are! 🤔😣
I find it all about the light and the lower the better! Up to a certain extent of course. Way too many people are into these highlight environments and don't realize that's a big part of the reason why they got algae me included until recently when I learned this lesson myself! I also recall Cory learning this lesson not too long ago which just shows you it's never too late to learn!😇 after watching all this I think the main conclusion is just dose CO2 and you'll have a lot less of these problems!🤯🤭 And adding nutrients causes more problems most times then it helps! And this is from a guy that has a 55 gallon tank chock-full of plants like plants on the sides of the glass with suction cups but no specific high light needed varieties. I mean many more plants from what you're seeing her tank! I have numerous bottles of fertilizers that now I don't even use because it caused more problems than it helped! Now if you're going to do CO2 then the game changes and then you need all these different fertilizers to balance everything out because things are happening much more quickly!
I picked nearly all low light plants for under the water. My high light requiring plants are immersed instead of submerged so they get their C02 from the air and not from the water as they grow above the rim with their roots still pulling nutrients from water and providing mechanical filtration with their matrixes of tiny roots. My frogbit does a good job of blocking excess light from the tank so I can run my lights at fullblast for whatever hours I desire, bearing in mind that I have to supplement nutrients proportionally to how much vegetation growth I see both above and below the rim. If I only want to dose 5ml of flourish once a week, and 2ml of api leaf zone supplement twice a month, and shrimp trace minerals as needed based on population size, I keep my full spectrum light on 7 hours a day from 1pm to 8pm, the natural sunlight that bounces in from my large window provides small amounts of light from the side during daylight hours, so technically there is about 10% lighting on my tank for maybe 4 hours a day, 25% for about 2, 50% for maybe an hour, then 100% from the top for 7. Everything in there is flourishing except for the algae, due to starting off purposefully with overlighting(16 hours a day and twice per week with ferts) while new plants were establishing, and added snails. There was a big algae explosion when I first put the aquascape together, which set the pace for the snails. They are now more than capable of handling anything that comes up inside their ecosystem and bringing the lighting down to where it is just enough that the plants grow at a manageable pace, makes the whole aquascape so much easier to manage. I think I spend maybe 15 minutes a week on maintenance, and no water changes or C02 needed(my goal was a 0 water changes build). This forces me to be choosy about what plants I keep, but I have built up quite a variety in this one tank, 7 species of plants with some neocardina shrimp and various snails. I have 4 more plant species on the way and some root tabs and I am so excited. (I didn't want to have to add ferts at all so the tank could be completely self sustaining but until I decide on what fish I want to stock, I'm gonna need it, especially since my current Anubias and the two new species of Anubias I just ordered are going to want me to provide a lil more sustenance while I wait for a proper colony of fert-machines (fish) to grow.
So, you’re limiting factor might be CO2, not light, so just watch out for that and pay attention to the plants as you make small tweaks to the light schedule. If you decide to inject CO2, I strongly advise against the DIY yeast or citric acid versions - plants prefer stability over quantity (low, stable levels rather than fluctuating levels that you get with those DIY options). Also, you alluded to this point when you mentioned your crypts melting, but stating it outright might be helpful to others: don’t make drastic changes, ever (unless your fish are gasping for breath...then change water but keep your head on straight! Dechlorinate!). If you see, Holy cow my potassium is only 5 ppm! It should be 20ppm!!! Try to raise it by a few ppm per day rather than all at once. I love your videos, Irene! I love your honest approach as an aquarist. You really fill an important niche here!
That's an important point! I honestly wouldn't put any liquid fertilizer in a low tech tank. Maybe she does her research at the pet store? Trying to balance out a high nutrient environment without CO2 is unnecessarily hard.
I'm there with ya. Tried a 10 gallon with the same set up and it went really well so set up a 29 gallon and that's gone bad because I think of the lighting. Set up a 75 gallon fully planted with C02 and I've been fighting brown hair algae for a month now. Hoping this video sets me off in the right direction (I know it will).
@@abdab3226 I don't know what Matt has but my low tech tank 10 gallon has, Cryptocoryne green, Crypto brown, Crypto Flamingo, Java fern and anubias petite. I do add some all in one ferts after every water change and then one 1ml every other day, this has helped the cryptos and ferns to grow better. I can tell you the java moss and the hair grass didn't well in this tank with my aqueon LED light.
@@tigersunruss Just sold my 36” aqueon led for a high-power Nicrew. I’m... expecting algae growth in my near future. Anyone else having trouble growing Java Fern? My plants have stayed the same size for 6 months...
My water is pretty hard and full of minerals! No wonder I am getting super lucky with my planted tanks.. but I also do low-medium light for more time, and use plants known to be “easy” to care for. I only use one pump of easy green once a week after a water change. No algae issues (except some on glass that I don’t clean for my nerites). 😍
Somewhere between Walstad's "Don't mess with it and see what survives" and the High Tech " keep messing with everything always", dwells the girl who talks fish.
I like the idea of Walstad's approach, but I find that you run into the problem of limiting the stock you can carry in your tank. I want to achieve the goal of not having to do too much to my tank, but I had to go to higher tech for the betterment of my fish, who are always my priority. I'll still do detective work should things go wrong with my plants that is not stock related.
Hi! I loved the work you put into your video to explain a lot of the nuisances to aquarium nutrients as I’m just a new hobbyist myself. I imagine you’ve found a solution already to your little plant friends at the end struggling to grow, but if you haven’t, Blake’s Aquatics has a nice experiment that shows the differences in different root tabs over time for different plants. I hope it helps your little friends!
I think the easiest way is to start with a good deep substrate and amended it for what your plants will need. This has worked great for me I had Algee issues at first but coming up on a year and I can’t sell plants fast enough to keep the tank from getting overrun thanks for everything 👍.
Super useful video! My challenge has always been moving too fast. Expecting too much too soon and getting impatient with the process. Learning to slow down is critical and this is true even if you are running CO2 with high light and fast growth.
If my tank starts looking a bit sad, I'll take out some plants to even things out again. I do need to dose potassium every so often. I never gravel vac. Thanks Irene
Great video and thank you for not "hiding" the issues you encountered, I have been farming algae for a qhile ...Regarding not being able to find a magnesium test kit, if you know your GH and Calcium amounts, you can always use the magnesium/Calcium/GH relationship to estimate your magnesium. Keep the videos coming!
Great job on this vid. I am still in the thinking about doing it phase. Nervous about getting in over my head. I appreciate information that keeps it simple for the rest of us.
I also have the same light and use a two-and-a-half-hour ramp up and down, with a 6 hour max light soak. I Started by cutting down blue light to no more than 7%, algae loves blue light. I use crushed coral in a mesh bag, instead of equilibrium, and use a liquid all purpose fertilizer with iron and a micronutrients supplement every other week. And I have no algae problems.
I had allowed a carpet of some type of moss/algae to grow on my shrimp tank. They liked it and it was blocking most of the surface reducing algae on the glass. The tank was such a mess, I’m still cleaning, vacuuming irresponsible amounts of poop out of substrate etc 😢 But the shrimp are happy and healthy, driftwood has nice looking moss coverage, one anubias is thriving. Time to start refining genetics 😁 Aquariums can be very resilient if kept consistent.
I definitely needed to see this video. I wanted plants in the worst way accompanied by some cool fish, but also wanted simple. As for now I am considering water, a filter and plastic gold fish lol. Thanks for the awesome video.
exactly what i was looking for! Same issues and same light. So today i'm "turning down the lights" LOL! I think i have some plant eaters too in the mix so i'm stalking my Tetras to find the culprit. Thank you for the links!! Can't wait to get my 75g "balanced", my 29g is beautiful, but i don't touch it so maybe that is also the problem with the 75g LOL. Again thank you!
I have Bacopa that completely took over my tank,( it literally swallowed The Whole tank and shrimp love to hide in it), but yet I buy fluval stratum and my JAVA FERN dies! Crazy but I love Plants that anytime I see a tank without one it just looks like something is missing. Anyway plants are amazing!
*Curious about the plants and fish in this aquarium? Check out my 2020 tour video: **ruclips.net/video/gJL441Ezsk0/видео.html*
Are you no longer in CO? Water in CO & NM is so **hard** and has soooo much calcium and other minerals, I **have** to keep hornwort so the rest of the plants do well. :/
@@Lazy_Fish_Keeper I'm still in CO, but they treat our water with a process that raises the pH and softens the water. So I have to add back in minerals for my animals and plants.
@@GirlTalksFish Colorado Springs water leaves massive residue in the tub... but now that I think about it, I don't remember seeing calcium deposits on the spigots like we have in NM🤔
The water here is so hard, 4 gallons is wasted for every gallon of RO.
So RO really is not cost effective.
I love how you show the problems with your tanks like algae, etc. So many youtubers hide all the frustrating stuff and make it look so easy
Thank you! I was listening to a podcast where an aquascaper was being interviewed and said that many of his fellow aquascapers will scrap an entire scape if algae starts growing out of control and just restart the aquarium setup. So we never get to see many of the behind-the-scenes disasters. 😛
Totally agreed!
factuals lol
@@GirlTalksFish Thanks for this video. I didn't realize I could / should massively turn down my lighting. Sent me off in a whole new area to investigate.
I agree OP. She Helps remind me take a breath and know that I have to take my time and make one change at a time :)
Extremely helpful in breaking down a concept that many others just leave at "find a balance". Thank you
100% agree!!!! :)
Do I have to put concentrated macro/micronutrients only once or do i have to have a schedule?
@@red_nullhugo4045 in a low light setup I’d say to do the recommended dosing for your tank size once a week and for medium to high light do something like one full dose a week with a half a dose in the middle or two full doses during the week. If you aren’t using in all in one you could probally dose a full dies of macros then dose half of the micros depending on your plant density.
a moment of silence for the amount of problem solving time we all have to go through for our beloved planted tanks
Amen
Just recently discovered the struggle that is cyanobacteria. It was a long, drawn out struggle rife with colorful language, moments of staring at my aquarium wondering if crying would help, and sleepless moments contemplating finding a less complicated hobby such as freelance biochemical engineering or dinosaur cloning. Glad I stuck with it, though. Not sure anyone would appreciate me walking a Velociraptor around the local dog park.
Hey Johnny, glad to hear you stuck with it! What ended up working for you? I had a bout of cyanobacteria, defeated it and now it's slowly peaking back.
@@courtneykeeps Howdy Courtney. I started by manually scraping and scrubbing as much as I could, did a big water change to siphon out as much as possible , and then started treating my tank with "API Erythromycin". I also cut back on my lighting, cut down on feedings, did extra water changes, and got in the habit of bleach treating my cleaning equipment between uses. It took me months to get it under control and it did try to creep back on me a few times during that time. Not sure if everything I did was necessary, but I haven't had problems with it for around six months now. Hope this helps!
@@johnnygee4206 Amazing! Thanks for the help. I'll try some of these things
@@courtneykeeps 🙂👍🤞
I’ve found good flow helps a lot, as it helps with the tank overall.
Thank you for actually trying to tackle this instead of just parroting "BALANCE!" like 90% of the rest of the internet!
I really admire that instead of caving in when you weren't perfect and insulted, you just kept learning.
Wow. This is LITERALLY my exact situation. Have a fluval 3.0, been running Bentley's light schedule, do not run CO2 and hair algae is everywhere. This was VERY helpful. Thank you so much!
This video sums ALL the reasons why you are one of my very favorite channels, Irene! Wow, I needed this video. Been trying to balance my 100g for a year, and would never have thought about the potassium and my Colorado soft water as possible culprits (& how all-in-ones may not be complete for soft water). Already watched twice and saving to watch later again - all the chart links and kit links are so helpful! You’re the best!
Thanks Irene! Good students make good teachers. Thanks for taking time to slowly learn, and teach so well. Appreciate what you do!
I haven’t seen a fish-tuber have as many problems than you (mean that in a good way) thanks for all the advice.
I kinda like green algae when it grows on the back, it makes a realistic green background that makes the tank look nice imo, kinda with saltwater how the light makes the tank look blue, but in fresh the green algae makes the tank look green.
A little bit algae is even good for tanks though
I know I'm a year late, and everyone already mentioned it, but what an amazing video and instructions. This literally made me feel happy about maintaining my fish tank, and tackling problems that undoubtfully will arise. Thank you for being different :)
This video is one of the most helpful I’ve seen on plants. I’m wanting to create a beautifully planted large tank and I’m sick of killing plants and fighting algae.
Your approach non setting the lowest light level then adjusting nutrients . While changing one thing at a time is brilliant and so well thought out. Ty!!!!!!❤
So I'm definitely a noob and didn't do things properly, didn't cycle my tank properly. Had a noobie aquarium emergency. I'm so much smarter now but my nitrites keep going up. I have 4 neon tetras 4 shrimp and 2 khuli loaches. My lil guys have been absolute troopers and have all survived. Your videos have helped me so much. I was a bad fish dad but now I'm much smarter. Thank you!!!
"Noob" .... like that fixed anything, ever. As far as I'm concerned that means, "I have no clue but I don't have that problem so I don't care."
I totally relate to this video 100% "balance your tank" answer doesn't help!
Agreed. It’s like telling someone how to walk a tightrope by saying, “Don’t fall” 🤣
Enjoyed the video explanation. Wish I had YT instructions back in the day. Lots of trial and error over the years until Internet forums and videos started helping me. Glad the hobby is still going strong and influencing others. Thank you from a fellow planted tanker 👍😎
Finally, an in depth video on this. I have set up several algae farms in past, due to not knowing how to balance my nutrients/light/CO2. Thank you for this!
I've kept a planted tank for a little over a year now. If I had this much trouble I would have quit! I've only encountered a bit of hair algae and it made me want to pull my hair out!
I'm impressed by your perseverance and willingness to spend so much time and money (on test kits) to sort out your imbalance.
Great, informative, beautiful video!
Very thorough for short vid, one of the best I've seen on tank balancing. Irene's frankness is always to the point and very useful, and editing is spot on.
I completely sympathize with your issues. I know them all.... my 125-g and two 75-g tanks were completely covered with green hair algae for months ( and they all have CO2 injection, Fluval 3.0 light and Fluval Stratum aqua soil). Finally, I bought 50 Siamese algae eaters and 50 Florida Flagfish (cost a fortune) for these tanks. Within 3 weeks, 90% of the hair algae and black beard algae was completely consumed in all three tanks! I have resisted the idea of getting these fish for the longest time because I find them “too plain” looking in my rainbow, angelfish and tetra tanks. But they absolutely saved my plants! I have tried EVERYTHING with no success. Now they are my favorite fish!
this might actually be the best planted tank video I've ever seen
Most of the time I don’t need to watch your videos but they’re still so fun to watch. I feel like you’re talking to us as a friend at Starbucks ranting about your aquarium, instead of being very stern and never seem like you’re having fun or enjoying yourself.
Thank you for this video. I too was growing an algae farm. I tried everything from testing the water to full on peroxide dips and nothing worked. I finally just lowered my lights about 90-95% and just left it alone for a couple of weeks. The tank was dimly lit and was afraid my plants might die. To my surprise, all the algae just started shedding and my plants were growing like crazy. My driftwood and rocks also lost all of their algae too. Lately, I've been testing a high light period of about 1 and a half hours to help my reds with the rest of the day being relatively low at around 15-25%. Water changes are 20 percent every week and 40-50% every two weeks. Again, thank you for these videos!
I’ve been struggling with figuring out this balance for years! This is the first video I’ve found that is relatable and practically understandable. Thank you so much!!
This might have been the most relatable and helpful video I've ever watched! Thank you!!
Omg thank you so much for making this video it took me almost one year to learn why my planted tank has tons of algae and melting plants but now slowly plants started to grow now but I still have leaves with brown patches now I know why I have them.
This makes it so much easier to understand. I was very disappointed in my tanks last year where everything went wrong. I definitely want to try again after this vid.
Please ignore all the hate you get, your doing a really amazing job 😁. Your videos are really helpful for me to learn more about my fish and plants and what I love most about your videos is that you ain’t scared to share your mistakes (as everyone makes mistakes but some won’t admit it lol) and from mistakes we learn from them to approve next time
Your videos are hands down the best fish keeping videos out there. I was JUST thinking this week about the question of how to balance a tank. Everyone says “balance the tank” but has never explained it. THANK YOU!
Wow. It's way more complicated than I'd thought! I guess that's why I only seem to be able to grow anubia, java moss, and of course - algae of all varieties!! I'm not sure I have your dedication and patience for it but your tank does look AMAZING now - what a difference.
So glad the algorithm brought me to you! New Walstad tanker here 👋. I somehow followed your exact pathway, from Fluval 3.0 Plant to Bentleys’s model. Fortunately I found this video before algae kicked in!
This video was amazing. You took a concept that us beginners don't know well enough and broke it down expertly. My one criticism was going to be, "You used test kits but never said what they were!" but then I looked at the description and saw that you linked to them. Fantastic. Thank you so much.
huh....I couldn't follow the information at all. I can't regulate my light levels except lowing the time I have my lights on. Also, I'm just not into doing research into which nutrients to make different plants do well. Maybe some day but I just now want my fish to be healthy for now.
I appreciate your video! I lucked out and just threw a bunch of plants and seeds in an aquarium with the fluval light and never had an issuefor over a year. I did a major plant cut back and all of these problems started. Now I'm doing water changes, ordering test kits, and water additives! Thanks.
This was a great video. I've been doing planted tanks for years and balancing things has mostly been a "trial and error + survival of the fittest" thing for me. While that method works great and I don't have to do hardly anything to maintain those tanks, I have little control over how they end up looking, and aquascaping isn't really an option. I think this info will help me with future builds when I want to try something a little more difficult than "toss plants in water and see what survives."
You’re very good at explaining things properly! Especially the processes. I’ve had that same top fin 5 gallon tank for about six years now and it’s still running great. A separate plug for the light is the only gripe, cause it can’t be put on a timer. Still a great tank nonetheless!
Great video, thanks for sharing what you learned. For years, I've been big on the idea of minimal water changes (cheap and lazy are my hallmarks for fishkeeping) in a planted tank following the Walstad method. In the end, I gave up. Things that worked well for me:
Soil substrate, capped with black sand and gravel (didn't bother with the wash/dry mineralizing process)
No water tests, lazy, but I know what my tap water is like.
Twice a week water changes for first 2-3months, then weekly 50% water changes.
Occasional DIY equilibrium (bought 1lb of eachMgSO4 + CaCl2 + CaSO4, lasts years) for GH coz of my soft water.
Whatever LED light, no dimmer, 12 hours
No EI/PMDD ferts, just occasional Flourish.
Excel daily for algae control (coz my light hours are long, I like to see my tank).
Canister filter (somehow algae likes to grow when I tried sponge filters).
Livestock are fancy guppies, RCS, a few Otos.
Plants that do well in my low tech setup are Crypts, Java Fern, Anubias.
The key for algae control (for me) really isn't "when plants grow well, they outcompete algae" crap (sounds great when you're writing a book) but water changes and maintenance (learned that from Green Aqua YT channel).
I don't comment often on YT videos but wanted to say this video is EXTREMELY well done. Great examples and reasoning and we have good editing I never felt lost leading to one step to the next. You do a great job explaining why everyone tanks will be different on algae issues many need to understand not everyone can yield same results with the same formula we need to sometimes tweak things to what helps us why I love this hobby its trial and error.
People can call someone anything they like, you actually went to the bottom of the problem, or tried to go as far as possible, testing everything ting what could. Just for that : congrats to yourself. Second of all, your point is totally the most important one : stabilizing means changing things little by little, without rushing and by observing every time you change something. 👌👌👌👍👍👍
So glad I came across your videos just before I set up my tanks for two new bettas! The problem I’m having is leaves dissolving, no planting substrate only epiphytes
Plants tend to melt back a bit at first as they learn to grow under water, as they're typically grown above water before you buy them
@@savannamm Yes. I heard Anubias can take months to acclimate.
I watched this before starting my aquarium, but now Ive had mine running for about 3 weeks now with a variety of plants. this week I noticed my Anubis, has got 1 decent dark spot that has now become a hole and my Anubis coin is starting to get some translucent leaves. I'm so glad I came back to your video. At the moment I only have a few snails so It makes sense my nitrogen is low, but I didn't realize how much of an effect it had on the plants.
I also had no idea I needed/ didn't have enough potassium. Hopefully adding some in can help get them happy again but I get fish added in. Thanks a lot from including everything in the description!
Defiantly the best video about balancing a tank! Thank you! I'd love to see a video on your maintenance for this tank too, like when you do tests and what tests etc.
Thank you! I'll have to do an updated video on how I clean this tank. In the meanwhile, here's a video on how I clean my planted betta tank, which is similar: ruclips.net/video/W3VV_c69CyQ/видео.html
@@GirlTalksFish Amazing! You're definitely most informative fish youtuber going at the moment!
Ok, I've kept fish for (35 omg) years and this is perhaps the best balancing guide I've come across.
As always brilliant video!
I spent 9 months battling BBA, but now it’s gone from my 200 litre planted tank.
I religiously do 50% water change at least once a week, have shorter but brighter 6 hours of lighting, I found even with dim lighting that’s on for 8-10 hours the tank became an algae farm.
Make you tank maintenance as easy as possible (for example get some hose and a pump for water changes) so it’s more enjoyable rather than just a chore, then you will more likely keep it up and not skip a week.
Nice video, was a newbie at one time to planted tanks. I am a firm believer in every tank is different,some plants won’t grow in any of my tanks. Others flower and grow incredibly well. People need to try different plants and see what works.
As a former avid terrestrial Gardner it’s comforting to know much of my knowledge carries over…again great video.
Irene! So timely! I am experiencing this exact issue. I starting getting green hair algae and it’s spreading from plants to my dragon rock. I thought maybe I should cut back on light and or my all in one fert. I started dosing liquid CO2, sure the hair algae burned off, but I’m sure it will come back. Like you said my tank is cloudy, hahaha. This is in my 15gallon Fluval flex. I also have tropica aquarium soil for some substrate nutrients.
I used to run a 60 gallon set up with just CO2, no ferts, no nutrient rich plant substrate and honestly everything thrived and no algae issues other than the standard source algae for my Otos.
You video is the most optimal timing for me! Thank you for all of your hard work on your videos and all the research you have do!
You learn the yourself, fertilizers only help the people who are selling them they're really not needed for the most part that's why you have fish there your fertilizer including the food you're feeding them! Nobody's dosing fertilizer out in nature and that's what your tank is at least with fish in it!🤭😉😇
@@bigjay1970 thank you! That’s very true! I think when the fert is done I’ll just go back to my old ways of C02 and let the natural fertilizer from fish and food so it’s job. Thank you for your validating comments!
Wow! I had the same issues with the Fluval 3.0 and low tech non co2 injection. I used Bentley’s method for the light too. I raised the light for better spread of light and dialed it down to 50% during peak times. Thanks for the great video!
Very helpful…used to have aquariums, became quite and gave everything away. Now ready fir a small bedside tank…thank you fir this!
Thank you so much, Irene. I am such a newbie. Set up my first planted tank in December. Its such a steep learning curve, lol. But you help me more than anyone. I really appreciate it. Also, you (and Ryo Watanabe) have inspired me to get a betta. He's gorgeous, and I hope I do well by him.
I had the same green hair algae problem with the same light! My solution was trim the algae as much as I could, then 40% light, 12 hrs a day, in a 24” deep tank. Heavily planted, lightly stocked.
Hugely helpful and well produced video. I am still struggling with black beard algae in my 75 gallon Rio Negro biome planted tank aquarium with CO2 injection while my Amazon swords and red cabomba weren't doing well. You have convinced me to reduce my lighting and increase my fish feeding to get the nitrates up. I was very proud of having 0 ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate. I will now be happy to see 20 nitrate.
Very helpful. You have given me some ideas. I am still trying to "Balance" my planted tank . Something that I have learned along the way is that cryptocoryne plants cannot process Nitrates. That will be why your crypts melted. They can't tolerate Nitrates. Take care.
Thanks "Eye"rene. 😁 I can't keep floating plants growing in my tank. But my other plants are finally growing well.
This video deserves a gold star for excellence.
Thank you, Irene, for going the extra mile and a half to cover the triad of plant needs. I discovered the same issues with fast vs. slow growing, who was gobbling up nutrients and why. Maybe the plant keepers can encourage vendors to add nutrients to their tank parameter care guides. Yep, it's extra work for them, but the payoff is more sales from us.
Great video, thanks for sharing. I have a simple set-up like yours and was able to solve some balance problems by putting lights on a 4 hour "rest" period during the day. eg 4 hours on, 4 hours off 4 hours on. The plants will produce carbon dioxide in the off period. I had less algae, and plant nutrient deficiencies issues resolved.
you are the best. I am setting up my first ever 40G tank. Thanks to you, I feel more confident 😊
You are making my day! I so needed this video because my plants are dying and I'm having trouble getting my algae in check.
I set up my tanks with some easy plants, and I put Watersprite in the tank, give it a few weeks, watersprite grows so quickly and absorbs so many nutrients it takes about 2-3 weeks to get it into balnce and it clears up.
I also use beamswork 10k led lights. I also hang on a power filter in addition to my sponge filters for a few weeks.
Yep! All my algae problems were solved over time with light adjustments! Those fluval 3.0's are magic 😇💙
Thank you so much for the video. It's been very helpful for my plants in my tank. Never did live plants before. And I was having all of the same problems. The leaf chart is awesome. I have been able to narrow down what is going on to have a thriving live plant tank. Thank you so much.😊
This video helped me out so much when I first started the hobby, a little over a year ago! Had to come back and like and subscribe! Took me some trial and error to get a feel for the balance with my plants (and melt...oh all the melting). It would've taken a lot longer without informative videos like this! Thank you and keep up the great work!
For the algorithm!!! Powerhouse video. I really enjoy this style , keep up the good work!
SUCH A GOOD SOLID VIDEO I LITERALLY WENT "OOOOOOOOOHHHHHHHH" and now I'm ready for anything
This is so much helpful of why our plants failed in the planted aquarium. thank u so much👍👍👍
I have to say that this is one of the best plant videos I have ever watched! Thanks!
Great video! I currently live in Germany and my plants do pretty good with just dosing the easy green once a week.
I’ve found it’s much easier to balance a larger tank than for a small one. Perhaps because changes are spread out over a larger volume.
Another great video! Love it!! Just wanted to add that to fight algae, let the plants do the work for you. All you need to do is to add lots of fast growing plants.
Thank you so much! I have watched a few of your videos in the past, this is the one that made me click subscribe. I’m so sick of researching this topic and only getting the jerks that call names or act like you shouldn’t be part of the hobby. Obviously people are trying to learn and they should take a lesson from you and be helpful and kind to people seeking answers or they should stay off the internet. Thank you so so much for finally answering my questions
Whoa, what a great video for introducing folks to planted tanks! ill definitely be sharing this with my viewers. thank you!
This was a very well explained video that I know will help me and my tank, I’ve been trying to get the light balance, fertiliser balance for awhile now, so all of this is food for thought. I will watch this again soon so I can refresh and reference back to it. Thank you! Steve.
That light is too expensive for me for now so I’m starting a led light with timer in it. Love your vids I’ve learned so much!
I love this! I’m also a beginner with planted tanks and I never knew how to go about “balancing” my tank. So I have the opposite obstacles as you, basic FluvalSmart aqua sky light, very hard water with very high phosphate! Still I’m constantly growing the same algae you are! 🤔😣
I find it all about the light and the lower the better! Up to a certain extent of course. Way too many people are into these highlight environments and don't realize that's a big part of the reason why they got algae me included until recently when I learned this lesson myself! I also recall Cory learning this lesson not too long ago which just shows you it's never too late to learn!😇 after watching all this I think the main conclusion is just dose CO2 and you'll have a lot less of these problems!🤯🤭 And adding nutrients causes more problems most times then it helps! And this is from a guy that has a 55 gallon tank chock-full of plants like plants on the sides of the glass with suction cups but no specific high light needed varieties. I mean many more plants from what you're seeing her tank! I have numerous bottles of fertilizers that now I don't even use because it caused more problems than it helped! Now if you're going to do CO2 then the game changes and then you need all these different fertilizers to balance everything out because things are happening much more quickly!
Wow what a journey and test of patience, thanks for sharing!
Thanks so much! I learned more from this video than I did from weeks of shifting through forums and articles.
I picked nearly all low light plants for under the water. My high light requiring plants are immersed instead of submerged so they get their C02 from the air and not from the water as they grow above the rim with their roots still pulling nutrients from water and providing mechanical filtration with their matrixes of tiny roots. My frogbit does a good job of blocking excess light from the tank so I can run my lights at fullblast for whatever hours I desire, bearing in mind that I have to supplement nutrients proportionally to how much vegetation growth I see both above and below the rim. If I only want to dose 5ml of flourish once a week, and 2ml of api leaf zone supplement twice a month, and shrimp trace minerals as needed based on population size, I keep my full spectrum light on 7 hours a day from 1pm to 8pm, the natural sunlight that bounces in from my large window provides small amounts of light from the side during daylight hours, so technically there is about 10% lighting on my tank for maybe 4 hours a day, 25% for about 2, 50% for maybe an hour, then 100% from the top for 7. Everything in there is flourishing except for the algae, due to starting off purposefully with overlighting(16 hours a day and twice per week with ferts) while new plants were establishing, and added snails. There was a big algae explosion when I first put the aquascape together, which set the pace for the snails. They are now more than capable of handling anything that comes up inside their ecosystem and bringing the lighting down to where it is just enough that the plants grow at a manageable pace, makes the whole aquascape so much easier to manage. I think I spend maybe 15 minutes a week on maintenance, and no water changes or C02 needed(my goal was a 0 water changes build). This forces me to be choosy about what plants I keep, but I have built up quite a variety in this one tank, 7 species of plants with some neocardina shrimp and various snails. I have 4 more plant species on the way and some root tabs and I am so excited. (I didn't want to have to add ferts at all so the tank could be completely self sustaining but until I decide on what fish I want to stock, I'm gonna need it, especially since my current Anubias and the two new species of Anubias I just ordered are going to want me to provide a lil more sustenance while I wait for a proper colony of fert-machines (fish) to grow.
Ah, gahd. Your literally an expert now for small bouts of curiousity. Thank you for helping me.
So, you’re limiting factor might be CO2, not light, so just watch out for that and pay attention to the plants as you make small tweaks to the light schedule. If you decide to inject CO2, I strongly advise against the DIY yeast or citric acid versions - plants prefer stability over quantity (low, stable levels rather than fluctuating levels that you get with those DIY options). Also, you alluded to this point when you mentioned your crypts melting, but stating it outright might be helpful to others: don’t make drastic changes, ever (unless your fish are gasping for breath...then change water but keep your head on straight! Dechlorinate!). If you see, Holy cow my potassium is only 5 ppm! It should be 20ppm!!! Try to raise it by a few ppm per day rather than all at once. I love your videos, Irene! I love your honest approach as an aquarist. You really fill an important niche here!
I guess this is why my low-light, no co2, no ferts tank works: because everything is balanced at the lowest level (with slow growth albeit)
@@abdab3226 oh, gosh. Rotala, anubias, hornwort, crystalwort, java fern, amazon sword, crypt, etc.
That's an important point! I honestly wouldn't put any liquid fertilizer in a low tech tank. Maybe she does her research at the pet store? Trying to balance out a high nutrient environment without CO2 is unnecessarily hard.
I'm there with ya. Tried a 10 gallon with the same set up and it went really well so set up a 29 gallon and that's gone bad because I think of the lighting. Set up a 75 gallon fully planted with C02 and I've been fighting brown hair algae for a month now. Hoping this video sets me off in the right direction (I know it will).
@@abdab3226 I don't know what Matt has but my low tech tank 10 gallon has, Cryptocoryne green, Crypto brown, Crypto Flamingo, Java fern and anubias petite. I do add some all in one ferts after every water change and then one 1ml every other day, this has helped the cryptos and ferns to grow better. I can tell you the java moss and the hair grass didn't well in this tank with my aqueon LED light.
@@tigersunruss Just sold my 36” aqueon led for a high-power Nicrew. I’m... expecting algae growth in my near future. Anyone else having trouble growing Java Fern? My plants have stayed the same size for 6 months...
My water is pretty hard and full of minerals! No wonder I am getting super lucky with my planted tanks.. but I also do low-medium light for more time, and use plants known to be “easy” to care for. I only use one pump of easy green once a week after a water change. No algae issues (except some on glass that I don’t clean for my nerites). 😍
I think this is the best tutorial I've seen on fighting algae.
Somewhere between Walstad's "Don't mess with it and see what survives" and the High Tech " keep messing with everything always", dwells the girl who talks fish.
I tried doing nothing and a had sick fish and a fish that died and I never will take that route again. My own fault for going against my gut
I like the idea of Walstad's approach, but I find that you run into the problem of limiting the stock you can carry in your tank.
I want to achieve the goal of not having to do too much to my tank, but I had to go to higher tech for the betterment of my fish, who are always my priority. I'll still do detective work should things go wrong with my plants that is not stock related.
Why you shouldn't add ANY pet to an unestablished enclosure. Ignoring algae, which is largely aesthetic.
Hi! I loved the work you put into your video to explain a lot of the nuisances to aquarium nutrients as I’m just a new hobbyist myself. I imagine you’ve found a solution already to your little plant friends at the end struggling to grow, but if you haven’t, Blake’s Aquatics has a nice experiment that shows the differences in different root tabs over time for different plants. I hope it helps your little friends!
I think the easiest way is to start with a good deep substrate and amended it for what your plants will need. This has worked great for me I had Algee issues at first but coming up on a year and I can’t sell plants fast enough to keep the tank from getting overrun thanks for everything 👍.
Super useful video! My challenge has always been moving too fast. Expecting too much too soon and getting impatient with the process. Learning to slow down is critical and this is true even if you are running CO2 with high light and fast growth.
If my tank starts looking a bit sad, I'll take out some plants to even things out again. I do need to dose potassium every so often. I never gravel vac.
Thanks Irene
Great video and thank you for not "hiding" the issues you encountered, I have been farming algae for a qhile ...Regarding not being able to find a magnesium test kit, if you know your GH and Calcium amounts, you can always use the magnesium/Calcium/GH relationship to estimate your magnesium. Keep the videos coming!
Great job on this vid. I am still in the thinking about doing it phase. Nervous about getting in over my head. I appreciate information that keeps it simple for the rest of us.
I also have the same light and use a two-and-a-half-hour ramp up and down, with a 6 hour max light soak. I Started by cutting down blue light to no more than 7%, algae loves blue light. I use crushed coral in a mesh bag, instead of equilibrium, and use a liquid all purpose fertilizer with iron and a micronutrients supplement every other week. And I have no algae problems.
I had allowed a carpet of some type of moss/algae to grow on my shrimp tank.
They liked it and it was blocking most of the surface reducing algae on the glass.
The tank was such a mess, I’m still cleaning, vacuuming irresponsible amounts of poop out of substrate etc
😢
But the shrimp are happy and healthy, driftwood has nice looking moss coverage, one anubias is thriving.
Time to start refining genetics 😁
Aquariums can be very resilient if kept consistent.
I definitely needed to see this video. I wanted plants in the worst way accompanied by some cool fish, but also wanted simple. As for now I am considering water, a filter and plastic gold fish lol. Thanks for the awesome video.
exactly what i was looking for! Same issues and same light. So today i'm "turning down the lights" LOL! I think i have some plant eaters too in the mix so i'm stalking my Tetras to find the culprit. Thank you for the links!! Can't wait to get my 75g "balanced", my 29g is beautiful, but i don't touch it so maybe that is also the problem with the 75g LOL. Again thank you!
Thank you for explaining how to balance your tank, as a newbie this was the info I needed.
I have Bacopa that completely took over my tank,( it literally swallowed The Whole tank and shrimp love to hide in it), but yet I buy fluval stratum and my JAVA FERN dies! Crazy but I love Plants that anytime I see a tank without one it just looks like something is missing. Anyway plants are amazing!
That's great that your bacopa is doing so well. Yeah, sometimes certain plants just like our tap water more than others. 🤷♀️
Crazy!
You made that all make sense... Thank-you. I guess I truly am a fish nerd, because to me you are one of the coolest people on youtube 😊