A No Cost Salt Water Tank

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  • Опубликовано: 14 окт 2024

Комментарии • 255

  • @FatherFish
    @FatherFish  5 месяцев назад +1

    STEM PLANTS BUNDLE SALE - Over 75 plants - 15 Species for $59! Limited Time OFFER so HURRY!
    father-fish-aquarium.myshopify.com/
    For Special Soil Supplements, Plants, FIsh & Merch in your country:
    fatherfish.fish/

  • @kathrynwhelbourn2140
    @kathrynwhelbourn2140 Год назад +30

    Hi father fish, i want to thank you. I had a struggling marine tank for a few years ( i incorporated algea back then to) and i watched you set up that marine tank on the older video. You only did 1 update and had a mandarin in it. Anyway i drove 2 hours to my beach got salt water and seaweed and some rocks and put them in. 99.9% of the seaweed died as it was from the atlantic but it was a massive success i have noticed my coral had longer polyps and overall looked healthy and my new macro algea grew in stronger. I just placed a new coral order due to the results. I have more copepods than ever and i feed my clown fish once a week if that. I am now planning a 120 gallon tank using your method. I am so pleased, greatful and thankful.
    Sincerely Kathryn

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +5

      Thank you for the update Kathryn. These are amazingly simple tanks to et up and maintain.

  • @Michael-qw9kg
    @Michael-qw9kg Год назад +20

    Please keep us updated on the progress, more videos on these simple saltwater setups would be great!

  • @ryanrogers8211
    @ryanrogers8211 Год назад +30

    That’s a cool little tank! I didn’t know you could do that with salt water tanks 😮

    • @challenger516
      @challenger516 Год назад +1

      A lot of people do this with salt water tank, where have you been? LOL

    • @ryanrogers8211
      @ryanrogers8211 Год назад +5

      @@challenger516 I was taught that to keep a saltwater tank you must be a chemist practically.

    • @fieldmarshaljoe
      @fieldmarshaljoe 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@ryanrogers8211 ignore him, whoever gave you that advice: whilst not exactly correct, they’re more on track than that guy is..
      Notice how he caught all the livestock in the same radius that he took the sand, water & plants.
      Salinity, PH, nitrate levels etc, are all different depending where in the ocean you are. The most important factor is probably waste in this case. The bay he showed us on the map where he is collecting this habitat, has a high traffic of boats passing through, therefore lots of oil/contaminants in the water. It’s on the shoreline so other contaminants are in high concentration. If you dropped let’s say, a clown fish into this tank: I doubt it would fair too well.
      Basically, any aquatic life living in the area you took the water from will do well, if you want to use natural salt water for more exotic marine life, then you would need to take a boat out to sea and get “cleaner” salt water, even then if would still be advisable to filter the water before adding to the tank.

    • @ryanrogers8211
      @ryanrogers8211 5 месяцев назад

      @@fieldmarshaljoe thanks for the tips

    • @fieldmarshaljoe
      @fieldmarshaljoe 5 месяцев назад

      @@ryanrogers8211 no worries, you could always collect a sample of water from your local beach and use some test kits to see how healthy the water is. But like I said, there will be contaminants not on your average test kits that could be harmful to your fish. Not to say it’s not do-able, but then that’s when it goes back to what your friend said “you need to be a chemist” because you will need a lot of chemicals to balance out the water, it’s just much easier to buy RODI/RO/distilled water and mix it with salt

  • @sacks7448
    @sacks7448 4 месяца назад +2

    My wife and i always get strange looks while collecting specimens down in Daytona and Pensacola, glad to see others out there collecting just like we do. Much love father fish, learned most everything I know from you.

  • @MichaelClark-uw7ex
    @MichaelClark-uw7ex Год назад +32

    A friend of mine started a saltwater tank and used natural seawater, he ended up with all kinds of really cool and wierd stuff growing in it.

    • @Greencloud8
      @Greencloud8 9 месяцев назад +2

      Ohhhhh I love it ❤!!
      How often does he have to go get more seawater to add!
      I am so lucky to live by the ocean 🌊

    • @Greencloud8
      @Greencloud8 9 месяцев назад +3

      When I can I wanna do salt water we have plenty of space in my parents house but they won’t let me and my room is kind of no room i already have a fresh water tank and some furniture and a queen bed
      I think it be so damn cool if my parents let me put salt water in the living room

    • @JoeyPierce
      @JoeyPierce 2 месяца назад

      Did you ever do a follow-up to this tank? I'm interested to know if & how you managed to provide nutrients to the macroalgae over time? That's my problem having set-up the same tank. I couldn't find anything on discord. In the future I'd like to get corals too. I wonder how they get their nutrition in the sea.

  • @JoeyPierce
    @JoeyPierce 4 месяца назад +1

    Binned all the plastic plants in my 118 gallons tank & planted loads of live plants in the sand (no dirt underneath sadly) that I've been running for 6 years. I swear my angel fish, corys, plecos & rainbow shark are happier, they appear more active. Stopped water changes too. I'll top up the water when I clean my filters every so often. Hope I can have a complete substrate setup some day.
    I'm keen to set up a saltwater tank, I can do it from the other side of the Atlantic from England 😀

  • @jmc2491
    @jmc2491 Год назад +2

    These videos you give to us will be around teaching people the right way to keep fish for decades to come. Thank you.

  • @Slawsers
    @Slawsers Год назад +7

    That macro algae is a pretty plant, also must be really cool to catch dwarf shrimps out in the wild.

  • @Twinkley1981
    @Twinkley1981 Год назад +6

    That tank looks so natural I love it. I want to do one myself now 😊

  • @Simplyflyit
    @Simplyflyit Год назад +1

    this is very interesting for me, i don't live anywhere near the ocean.. I live in a land of lakes...so I figured that I would use the sand, and the water to a degree, from the lakes in my area. I take samples from a few lakes and streams, so that I can assure a varied culture in the water column. I took sand from below the water line, in areas that are not well traveled. Thanks Father Fish !

  • @dwarfhernandez6636
    @dwarfhernandez6636 Год назад +1

    My high school boyfriends grandmother used to live at Slaughter Beach, DE. We used to go collect grass shrimp in the reeds to sell to local aquarium shops! Lol

  • @saltwaterinmyveins
    @saltwaterinmyveins 7 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome! I did the same thing as a kid. My Dad was a shrimper so I searched the by catch for critters. A knobbed whelk killed everything within first day.

  • @AquaticDomain
    @AquaticDomain Год назад +4

    So inspiring. I am going to do something similar from my local pond and streams. I used to live near the ocean but we moved a few years ago. Can’t wait to see how it progresses.

  • @ThatDollLoopie
    @ThatDollLoopie 9 месяцев назад +1

    We're planning on making our own natural salt water rock pool in the garden of our house by the coast. It's a few years before we can actually do it but this video has been incredible insightful. Can't wait to see how it turns out

  • @gregoryhorn
    @gregoryhorn Год назад +3

    Nice looking forward to seeing some updates on the tank progress

  • @leonardbarron6967
    @leonardbarron6967 Год назад +3

    Wild green sailfin molly's would convert to saltwater, I have mine in a brackish tank but considering on setting up a salt water tank and move a few over to it.

  • @seannunes2041
    @seannunes2041 Год назад +4

    Very nice FF. Love all the macro algae, becareful of the culerpra grows like weeds. So colorful and great use of live sand and natural sea water ❤.

  • @BunzSudz
    @BunzSudz 4 месяца назад

    I love that! How wonderful. I'm excited to see how it goes over the next months! Keep us posted!!

  • @huldu
    @huldu Год назад +10

    I've always been terrified of keeping a saltwater tank. Growing up I heard so many things about it, how hard it was to keep and expensive, let alone the fish. It was very disheartening. You made it look so easy!

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +3

      You can do it! So simple it is stupid.

    • @absolutelyunepic3072
      @absolutelyunepic3072 Год назад +1

      I felt the same way, but I started a native salt tank and that was much less expensive and difficult

    • @MLR-jw5em
      @MLR-jw5em 2 месяца назад

      What about the salt content getting too high?

  • @LordDRockMusic
    @LordDRockMusic 7 месяцев назад +2

    Can we get an update on this tank? It seems tried and true that your methods work for freshwater, but this is the first saltwater project I've seen of yours and id LOVE to get more confirmation on how well it works, differences in care, etc. Thanks!

  • @markfranklin8831
    @markfranklin8831 Год назад +1

    Oh i forgot please keep us updated on this journey. Thanks for sharing 💯💗👍✌️

  • @marymendez4178
    @marymendez4178 Год назад +1

    I did enjoy seen the fishtank put together, gosh a windy day and she's out gathering items. Goodbye for now, love you Fatherfish.

  • @nhansme
    @nhansme Год назад +2

    Love that little piece of nature you created 😍😍👍👍

  • @JStankXPlays
    @JStankXPlays Год назад +1

    I am really enjoying watching you build these tanks!

  • @EuroGupper
    @EuroGupper Год назад +2

    Natural, simple, and yet beautiful

  • @harrytruax5195
    @harrytruax5195 Год назад +1

    Cool! If I knew you when I was a kid, I would have been glued by your side! Cheers!

  • @kdr1048
    @kdr1048 Год назад +3

    How fun! I never set up a saltwater aquarium but maybe in the future ❤

  • @chickensyndrome1465
    @chickensyndrome1465 Год назад +1

    I think I'll be moving out on the west coast soon, I'll definitely have to try this :D

  • @hypanusamericanus9058
    @hypanusamericanus9058 11 месяцев назад +5

    The centerpiece macroalgae is Codium (likely Codium fragile), not Caulerpa. It is not as fast of a grower, but it is definitely a gorgeous species nonetheless! I have some Codium growing in my own marine aquarium under high lighting and very high nitrates/phosphates and it has developed some nice branches that my micro brittle stars love to hide within.
    Edit: whoops, looks like someone already pointed out the misidentification in the comments.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  11 месяцев назад +3

      Yes! Thank you. My error. I have yet to find caulerpa in local water.. Lots of Codium, however. It is a nice algae.

  • @ShadowMasta
    @ShadowMasta Год назад +2

    Great informative video Father Fish. So how can you sustain a saltwater tank like freshwater since freshwater has plants to filter ammonia.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +3

      salt water has algae and bacteria to exchange the ammonia.

    • @ShadowMasta
      @ShadowMasta Год назад +1

      @@FatherFish Can you pleeaaase make another video and elaborate how one can run a saltwater tank without the need of a water change. Is its the same principle on the video “Saltwater tank from the Sea” with mindfulness of feeding, Father Fish?

  • @markfranklin8831
    @markfranklin8831 Год назад +1

    Awesome awesome awesome i love it. Im wanting to do the same thing. Thanks for sharing 💯💗👍✌️

  • @LRBaquatics
    @LRBaquatics Год назад +1

    Great video! Absolutely loved this!

  • @miguelroldao6939
    @miguelroldao6939 Год назад +2

    Just a couple of corrections for anybody watching: 1-The large macro algae is not Caulerpa. It is from the Codium genus. 2-The "killifish" seem to be a species of mullet which can grow a couple of feet and will need rehoming.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +4

      The plant is a codium. Correct. The fish are a killie, however, not a mullet.

  • @Boogerboys1990
    @Boogerboys1990 Год назад +2

    Cant wait to try my FF salt water setup. Im in michigan so ill have to source everything from shops. Any tips for the substrate??? Thanks FF u are a blessing to the hobby and my life!!!!!

  • @rdred8693
    @rdred8693 5 месяцев назад

    I live on Cape Cod, going to try this someday!

  • @jaidevsingh2913
    @jaidevsingh2913 Год назад +1

    was waiting to see one from you and here it is. very nice one.

  • @VictoriaHOUGH-n7u
    @VictoriaHOUGH-n7u 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very well done FF,,,,,!❤

  • @Les-OZZYTHEOSCAR
    @Les-OZZYTHEOSCAR Год назад

    Love this as you never know what's going to turn up in there. Real interesting

  • @BrodysBettas
    @BrodysBettas Год назад +1

    Well, you got me interested now! I'm in Hampton, VA right next to the beach, too!

  • @hydrostream76
    @hydrostream76 Год назад +1

    The Best
    Thank you Father Fish !

  • @andyrussell5177
    @andyrussell5177 Год назад

    Love this guy. Just happen on his channel and ive aready gone out gotten mud rocks leaves and started a lil aquarium. I looks awesome to me

  • @bruceevans3476
    @bruceevans3476 Год назад +2

    No water changes? Just top up with collected sea water?
    Awesome video.👍

  • @sammyvh11
    @sammyvh11 Год назад +2

    Totally cool tank

  • @DawidSL407
    @DawidSL407 Год назад +1

    Wow nice, in my country it's illegal to take sand from the beach ( you need to pay for the permit) but nice tank ! And can't wait for an update with new fish

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +2

      Sand occurs in many places, not just beaches. The law is arrogant.

  • @Greencloud8
    @Greencloud8 9 месяцев назад +1

    How often do you need to return to the ocean to add water to the tank

  • @tessw9744
    @tessw9744 Год назад +4

    Hahaha I live half a block from the Atlantic ocean! Father Fish, you're killing me! Since watching you I've already started a few natural tanks in the last month. Now I feel like I gotta do this! 😆
    I'd like to see an update, because I'm wondering how you would maintain the water balance and salinity, before I try.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +2

      Go for it. Learn from your own experience.

    • @tessw9744
      @tessw9744 Год назад +3

      @@FatherFish
      Once I collected 5 hermit crabs from the ocean. I put them in ocean water in a tupperware. They only lasted about 3 days before dying, even tho I had them in ocean water and sand....so that's why I'm a bit leary of doing a tank.
      I watched them for hours tho. Those hermit crabs are funny fellas! They would get out of their shells and pull another crab from their shell and steal the home! 😂
      But they died after a few days. If I only knew how to keep the water healthy, they would have been excellent in a tank.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +3

      @@tessw9744 Follow our lead here. We are all about making this happen.

  • @theariumguy
    @theariumguy Год назад +1

    Do you do water changes on your tank? Because I would like to try 😉

  • @gerlandkent6377
    @gerlandkent6377 Год назад +1

    [thank, you for you're video father fish this is what I would like to get in to next salt water fish. I'm on the Chesapeake bay on the virginia side and next beside the Potomac river]

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +1

      I am further up the shore, in Cambridge ,and would love to collect in and around the lower Potomac.

  • @pennypiper5857
    @pennypiper5857 Год назад +1

    Thanks for sharing:)

  • @osmanndong4879
    @osmanndong4879 Год назад +1

    Thank you Father Fish !

  • @kieranshannon9733
    @kieranshannon9733 7 часов назад

    Hi I live in Ireland 🇮🇪 I want to set up a salt water tank.
    Could I use natural Irish sea water for my aquarium ? I live near the beach 🏖️

  • @JoeyPierce
    @JoeyPierce 2 месяца назад

    I did this a month ago, still going strong, gobies, silver fish, not sure what they are, they look like neon tetras but silver & obviously not freshwater. And I got a baby starfish that was on the macroalgae 😊

  • @LFCWATP
    @LFCWATP Год назад +1

    Wonderful natural approach as always father fish. Does the sand not go bad tho without soil underneath in a contained tank? I remember the first tank i set up i used sand only snd it went off with a foul smell presumably cause there was no oxygen getting through it.
    How often do you have to replace this salt water. Or like your natural approach to fresh water do you not change it?

    • @Michael-qw9kg
      @Michael-qw9kg Год назад +4

      You want your deep substrate to be oxygen deprived in order to create an environment to break down nitrates.
      As long as excessive food isn’t added, water shouldn’t be replaced, just topped off with RO as salinity won’t change.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +3

      Good answers Michael. The sand is not dug up to determine if it smells.

  • @Darren4032
    @Darren4032 Год назад +1

    Very nice tank.

  • @Rodrigo-xe9ij
    @Rodrigo-xe9ij Год назад +1

    How will you replace the water that evaporates sir?

  • @misha-elministries5246
    @misha-elministries5246 Год назад +2

    Very nice . Please do some follow up videos as You know I am a marine aquarium enthusiast also . Thank you for the video .

  • @danmaltby3271
    @danmaltby3271 8 месяцев назад

    I love. Astetique FF, to be a lifeguard nearby at Fenwick Island in the summer of 1991., my son and I have four fish tanks and one to transition to a saltwater tank and you’re my guy when it comes to substrate man you like open the whole world to us so I’m checking out what to do I need to go to Belmar in New Jersey and get some actual salt water or can I do it with tapwater

  • @doesnotexist6524
    @doesnotexist6524 Год назад +1

    I've wanted to do a combined corals + macro algae tank for a while. Are you planning to add any corals or anemones to this?

  • @Yessirrrsz
    @Yessirrrsz Год назад +1

    Very cool

  • @CrabSaySoo
    @CrabSaySoo 2 месяца назад

    Don’t mind me asking is sea salt safe for crabs because I have a European green crab and I want to give it the best life but I have no experience with saltwater tanks but for now it’s just living in a tank with natural seawater so I just want to sea if sea salt is safe for them

  • @augustobh1
    @augustobh1 Год назад +1

    Hey Father Fish. I'm setting up a 70x35x35cm tank with 1cm of dirt and 4cm of pool filter sand. The hardscape will feature guava branches and dragon stones, moderately planted. I'm thinking of putting some neocaridinas, 4 corydoras, 3 pairs of endlers and 20 rasbora galaxies, in addition to another 20 tetra neons. Will the tank support this fauna? This will be my first tank... Hugs from Brazil.

  • @K3Y_D1SAGR33
    @K3Y_D1SAGR33 5 месяцев назад

    I did make something like this, except with less seaweed and few critters (living in the West Coast btw).

    • @K3Y_D1SAGR33
      @K3Y_D1SAGR33 4 месяца назад

      I only collect anything that is not in a marine protected area

  • @andri7493
    @andri7493 Год назад +1

    what if we put some anemons or live corals ?
    and what about the filtration ?

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +1

      I avoid most anemones. Deep substrate is adequate filtration. Several powerheads are critical.

  • @GlassBoxHero
    @GlassBoxHero Год назад +10

    If I lived near a beach, my saltwater tank would already be complete.

  • @gerlandkent6377
    @gerlandkent6377 Год назад +1

    [great, finds]👍

  • @tractorjordan4730
    @tractorjordan4730 Год назад +2

    Hi father fish should I do a dirt layer under the sand for my saltwater aquarium or just sand like the one in the video?

    • @tractorjordan4730
      @tractorjordan4730 Год назад +1

      In a video from 2 years ago called “salt water simple natural easy perfect” I watched you set up two tanks both were previously freshwater aquariums. In one tank you left the dirt and sand substrate in from the previous freshwater aquarium and capped it with more sand and the other you took the substrate out entirely and replaced it with just sand. I am curious how the tank with dirt did versus the tank with just sand. Thanks for all the videos so helpful and inspiring!

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +2

      the one with soil did not do as well.The sand was live from under water in the Bay.

    • @tractorjordan4730
      @tractorjordan4730 Год назад +1

      @@FatherFish Thank you!

  • @PepeCoinMania
    @PepeCoinMania Год назад +1

    you can start a tank like that and later on start buying some soft corals and put some fish if you want. you can save a lot of money if you can do it

  • @pamelaferry1797
    @pamelaferry1797 9 месяцев назад

    Hello Father Fish I have a question about saltwater tank... my question is ... what do you use to treat well water to start your saltwater tank ?

  • @Andreas-gh6is
    @Andreas-gh6is Год назад +7

    Some additional notes: You need reverse Osmosis water to top off the tank. Just using tap water or new ocean water will throw off the concentrations of all the elements. Of course, this tank can't sustain corals, but even the macro algae will consume some of that. Not sure how well they do with just the fish waste for fertilization. So the occasional water change with ocean water may not be the worst idea...

    • @ryanrogers8211
      @ryanrogers8211 Год назад +1

      How could topping off with ocean water be bad?

    • @Andreas-gh6is
      @Andreas-gh6is Год назад +7

      @@ryanrogers8211 salt doesn't evaporate... refilling with ocean water would therefor increase the salt concentration.

    • @ryanrogers8211
      @ryanrogers8211 Год назад +1

      @@Andreas-gh6is do the plants consume any of the salt?

    • @Andreas-gh6is
      @Andreas-gh6is Год назад +3

      @@ryanrogers8211 off the top of my hat I don't think so... at least not a lot. They probably enclose SOME salt in their tissue, and then you remove the plant matter when it grows to big eventually.... Anyway there are people on youtube popularizing macroalgae tanks, I think they have to replenish lots of things....

    • @ryanrogers8211
      @ryanrogers8211 Год назад +1

      @@Andreas-gh6is interesting

  • @katrinabond7974
    @katrinabond7974 Год назад +1

    How would you top off water for evaporation? Just run and grab more ocean water? Do you think it would mess up the system if topped off with chemically treated tap?

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +2

      RO or distilled water is best.

    • @marinusch
      @marinusch Год назад

      ​@@FatherFishdoes that not mess up the salinity? Or does the salt not eveporate with the water?

    • @Daniele63
      @Daniele63 8 месяцев назад

      @@marinusch If you try to boil salt water, what remains after the water evaporated ? Salt. Same thing here, the salt won't go anywhere once it's in

    • @Daniele63
      @Daniele63 8 месяцев назад

      @@FatherFish What about topping with rainwater ? I would think it's fine since that's what happens in the ocean

  • @davidlawlor4317
    @davidlawlor4317 Год назад +2

    Amazing! We are blessed to live on the coastline with access to 40+ beaches within 40 mins drive. I wonder what a Belfast/ Strangford Lough saltwater aquarium would look like?

  • @JoeyPierce
    @JoeyPierce 2 месяца назад

    I'm exactly the same, you have to have clownfish in a saltwater tank. I have a locally caught goby 😊

  • @Fred-maurice
    @Fred-maurice Год назад +2

    Mould and clam can clean gallons of water every day.

  • @dltguitar6532
    @dltguitar6532 Год назад +1

    an update on this tank would be great

  • @gordonissocoollike
    @gordonissocoollike 10 месяцев назад

    Caulerpa is different type of sea algae but I’m like your ideas

  • @leonardbarron6967
    @leonardbarron6967 11 месяцев назад +1

    In your video " The three worst crimes against aquariums " you mentioned that ro water is neutral 7 ph, you said if you make saltwater mix ( like Instant Ocean ) sea salt with ro water and then add it to tank with livestock it becomes acidic around 6 ph, I want to set up a natural saltwater 75 gallon, but now I'm not sure about it. I'm too far to tote natural seawater, so I'd be using Instant Ocean seasalt, how can I use it in my saltwater tank if its acidic 6 ph ? I'm stumped ?

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  11 месяцев назад +1

      You misunderstood. Sea salt contains substantial carbonates and will not drop below 8.0 Ph unless there are substantial carbonate leaching organisms.

    • @leonardbarron6967
      @leonardbarron6967 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@FatherFish thanks I thought it meant if you use ro water to mix your Instant Ocean sea salt with it reduced the mixture to acid side 6 ph, so I can use ro water & Instant Ocean after all, thats great. Waiting on an update video on your no cost low budget natural saltwater tank. Thanks for all your videos & know how. Its a god send to the aquariums folks.

  • @philmarsh3024
    @philmarsh3024 8 месяцев назад

    I don’t live near ocean. What do I do for base? Do I simply put in 6” deep sand bed for base or something different? Thanks!

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  8 месяцев назад

      You can use a 3” sand substrate, just get the sand from above the wave line.

  • @andyrussell5177
    @andyrussell5177 Год назад +2

    I thought about this but wondered how I would maintain it as time went on.

  • @danmaltby3271
    @danmaltby3271 8 месяцев назад

    my first question I have father fish is should I still go dirt underneath the sand because once I heard about dirt on your channel it life was eye-opening so I would think that I would still want the dirt to be able to absorb all the nutrients you know,
    that’s what separates the moon from the Earth is that living poo we call dirt , its alive , so my gut tells me that I should still do dirt underneath the sand. so would you do just sand for a saltwater water?

  • @Doxicyclin
    @Doxicyclin 8 месяцев назад

    Hello!
    It's been 6-months now. how goes the status of this tank? I am excited to know!

  • @theamjadjamousable
    @theamjadjamousable Год назад +1

    Nice , finally a saltwater tank .

  • @EVERYTHINGGUY226
    @EVERYTHINGGUY226 Год назад +1

    Nice video buddy

  • @pamelawelch5623
    @pamelawelch5623 Год назад +1

    Speaking of natural aquariums, I have set up one of the two natural aquariums that I will have. I got plants from you and I got plants from a guy named Dustin and Dustin has a has a fish place and he he sells plants now I want something to nourish the plants, and I wanted to ask if this was all right to use The oven the stuff is called plant booster. It’s a plant booster and it’s called grow with oh growth growth juice is what it’s called so I just want to know if that’s gonna do anything to harm the natural environment for the fish. Thank you so much and I did get plants from your store also so I have my first planted aquarium and I still need to move my fish into their new place.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +1

      Tell me about your substrate.

    • @pamelawelch5623
      @pamelawelch5623 Год назад

      @@FatherFish my substrate is 1 inch of dirt plus the of the stuff that you sent me that I purchased to enrich the soil and there’s 2 inches of sand on the top and I ordered the plants and they’re they both came today yours and Dustin‘s plants came today so I put them into the substrate I have not added any fish yet. That’ll happen in a day or so but it’s it is the the 1 inch of dirt and the 2 inches the sand and the water and the plants and the fish that’s what we have.p.

  • @absolutelyunepic3072
    @absolutelyunepic3072 Год назад +1

    I set one of these up (a 40g) and i had a lot of stuf like the seaweed die. Also I had a lot of my fish except for the killis of course, die during a really hot day. I take it that those fish can't handle high summer temps, but im still not sure exactly what did that to them.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +1

      important to feed rarely, only live, and limit algae growth early on. Heat can be a killer.

  • @PaiPeixe
    @PaiPeixe 4 месяца назад

    Father Fish, one question: I feel a little affraid of put a pair of clownfish in a cold saltwater, without a heater (as you mentioned on this video). What do you think about it ?

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  4 месяца назад

      Salt water reef fish live in water normally about 60f

    • @PaiPeixe
      @PaiPeixe 4 месяца назад

      Even if born and created in a captivity situation (from Pet shops) ?

    • @PaiPeixe
      @PaiPeixe 4 месяца назад

      Even if clownfish born and created in a captivity situation (from Pet shops) ?

  • @mr_phtm
    @mr_phtm 7 месяцев назад

    Also what are the optimal temperatures for this kind of saltwater aquarium?

  • @ChrisVi25
    @ChrisVi25 Год назад +1

    How could we make a stable, live saltwater aquarium without any tachnical equipment ( filter and pump)?

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад

      Got a few vids on just that topic.

    • @ChrisVi25
      @ChrisVi25 Год назад

      @@FatherFish Thank you! Could you please send a link, cause I cannot find them.

  • @PaiPeixe
    @PaiPeixe 4 месяца назад

    Hello Father Fish ! Can I put a pair of clownfish in a 60F tank temperatur, even if the fishes come from a Pet Shop ?

  • @MrLeavemikealone
    @MrLeavemikealone Год назад +1

    Nice! I haven't done a salt tank since the 80's. I lost interest when my anemone swallowed a clown fish. Nobody at the local shop believed me but, I watched it happen.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +2

      I have had the same experience. Especially the Atlantic pink tip with its large mouth,. Baby nemos build up immunity. Fish grown in captivity have none.

  • @mappsvilleboi
    @mappsvilleboi 3 месяца назад

    Yessssss, found it!

  • @enkeledamolla1390
    @enkeledamolla1390 Год назад +1

    Can u get water from e pond for fresh water tank?

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +1

      yes. absolutely.

    • @enkeledamolla1390
      @enkeledamolla1390 Год назад

      @FatherFish I got a pond behind my house I took your videos 1 by 1 and set up my aquarium very easy I just put the plants on a small terracota from the pond All perfect The elements for the dirt I already have it from my garden work

  • @Guppy_Girl
    @Guppy_Girl Год назад +5

    For anyone thinking of collecting live animals and seaweed from the beach check your state laws first. It’s not worth the fine you have to pay if you get caught.

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +1

      I do not know of a state where this is illegal.

    • @Guppy_Girl
      @Guppy_Girl Год назад +2

      @@FatherFish I know it is illegal to take sand and certain types of seaweeds from Florida beaches. I’m sure every state has different laws. Researching it doesn’t hurt.

  • @kanedadry7642
    @kanedadry7642 Год назад +1

    I’m really curious about evolution of the tank

  • @Awsometurtle20
    @Awsometurtle20 4 месяца назад

    what kinda light would u reccomend for salt water tanks?

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  4 месяца назад +1

      two. A strong at least 100W led flood light and something with blue spectrum.

    • @Awsometurtle20
      @Awsometurtle20 4 месяца назад

      @@FatherFish thanks very helpful

  • @w-brothers1850
    @w-brothers1850 5 месяцев назад

    With this method are you able to add corals and the types of saltwater fish you see in the stores?

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  5 месяцев назад

      With some modifications, yes.

    • @w-brothers1850
      @w-brothers1850 4 месяца назад

      @@FatherFish I’m trying to setup a 60 gallon reef tank and I’m trying to figure out what the basic requirements are for a natural saltwater setup with corals.

  • @andrewderksen3342
    @andrewderksen3342 Год назад +1

    I was just thinking about asking you about this lol

  • @gerlandkent6377
    @gerlandkent6377 Год назад +1

    [it's, a lot of wild life from the salt water]

  • @maryglover8283
    @maryglover8283 11 месяцев назад +1

    Interesting

  • @larryhenry719
    @larryhenry719 Год назад +1

    Do the hermit crabs live underwater are they different than the ones in pet stores

    • @FatherFish
      @FatherFish  Год назад +1

      Yes. they are an aquatic species.