Meeting location for the 2024/2025 Season will be at J.A. Dulude arena.  Meetings start at 7 pm.

Pictures of my new Malawi African Tank!

Started by adam_ottawa, October 04, 2006, 11:58:58 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

adam_ottawa

So after patiently planning and waiting 2 months, I finally got my new tank fully set up.

I have a 40 gallon tank with texas holey rock, just over a dozen demasoni of various sizes (thanks pseese), 6 yellow labs (thanks pegasus) and a bunch of java fern (thanks sykomoney).  Oh and thanks to pitabread for the ammonia to learn all about fishless cycling!

This tank is a great centrepiece in my living room.  The fish totally love the caves in the holey rock.

I'm truly amazed to see that the larger dominant demsoni seem to be the most skittish and protect their terriroty moreso than the smaller non-dominant ones.

Here are some pics of the general progress:

1.  Initial filling with substrate and water.  Yeah it's a bad pic of me but you get the gist of it.  4 Jul 06.

2.  Rocks laid out and mounted on slate prior to putting them in tank.  4 Sep 06.

3.  Tank with plants added.  19 Sep 06.

4.  Stocked with fish.  30 Sep 06.

5.  All other pics are of the fish taken 30 Sep - 1 Oct 06.

[attachment deleted by admin]

az

AQUA VALLEY    
1158 Ogilvie Road, Ottawa

2016 Hours
Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri >> 12-7pm
Sat, Sun >> 11-5pm
Mon >> CLOSED
Tel: 613 695 6961 Fax: 613 695 6532  
www.aquavalley.ca

Ottawa's BIGGEST SALTWATER Selection

Tel: 613 695 6961 Fax: 613 695 6532     www.aquavalley.ca

babblefish1960

It would appear that the fish have found a lucky sponsor in having everything they could want on hand, nice.

darkdep


PaleoFishGirl

Yeah, the rock is beautiful! What an excellent setup!

bitterman


Rudy00

yeah, VERY cool piece of rock for sure, where did you get your hands on a piece like that?

adam_ottawa

#7
Thanks everyone.

I found the holey rock from our good friends at ebay.  Although the initial price wasn't too bad, by the time I paid for shipping (UPS) and brokerage fees, it cost me a fortune!  The large piece weighs 42 lb!  It was well worth it though considering this tank is in my living room.   ;D

RoxyDog

very nice!

psst! don't ever invite DarkDep over to your house...I suspect he can lift 42 lbs! ;)
Tanks: salty nano cube, working on a fresh 125

Life is too short to wake up with regrets.  So love the people who treat you right.  Forget about the one's who don't.  Believe everything happens for a reason.  If you get a second chance, grab it with both hands.  If it changes your life, let it.  Nobody said life would be easy, they just promised it would be worth it.

darkdep

I've already warned the cichlid crew at the meetings; if I ever see THR at the auction again it's MINE.  :)

adam_ottawa

Quote from: RoxyDog on October 05, 2006, 03:44:26 PM
very nice!

psst! don't ever invite DarkDep over to your house...I suspect he can lift 42 lbs! ;)

Lol...but first he would have to get it out of the tank.  It was a challenge to get it in there in the first place.  It took two of us and we had to manipulate it very carefully!

darkdep


zippity

i will help u DD, after all it is because of you i lost out at the auction last year on MY piece of THR.

darkdep

It's a big piece, we can sledge it in half :)

adam_ottawa

You wouldn't...not to a beautiful piece like that!  :P

adam_ottawa

So I was doing a water change today and, lo and behold,  I found a little baby demasoni!  My first ever!

I can't believe it only took a couple weeks for my fish to get busy.  Because these fish are new to me, and still very young, I didn't notice any that were holding eggs.  The female must have either been hiding really well or I just plain didn't notice.  I guess I'll have to start really paying more attention to them.

Now that I know my fish are fertile, I can imagine that it will only be a matter of time before I set up a grow out tank.  :o

Anyone have any suggestions as to what to feed the fry?  For the morning feeding, I'll try crushing up my Hikari algae pellets into powder for it.  Is there something better I should try?  The other food I feed is NLS cichlid pellets but I know that wouldn't be appropriate for this little guy (or gal).

Demasonian

Actually, I feed my fry crushed NLS grow pellets to start. I just use the lid to grind it up. Once they get to about .5", they can eat uncrushed NLS grow.

For fry in my main tank, however, I let them forage for their own food. This means algae off the rocks and little pieces of NLS floating by after being crunched on by the adult fish.

One piece of advice, not trying to be a downer, but unless you move the fry to another tank, there's a good chance it'll wind up as a snack for one of your other fish.

pegasus

Don't need to try to feed the sole fry, it will find more than enough to feed on.

QuoteI've already warned the cichlid crew at the meetings; if I ever see THR at the auction again it's MINE.
I guess I'll pay dearly for the bucket! LOL

KarEn

Very nice setup! Nice rock! I was planning to get one some time ago, but then calculated tha cost of shipping... and decided not to go that route. How much did you end up paying for the shippment?

I would change the position of your heater. Very visible. Why don't you put it in the corner?

Regards,
Kar En
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
| 120 Gal Miracles Aquarium (starphire glass) Tanganyikan Cichlids |
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Cichlid Empire is built on intelligence, adaptability and a surprising degree of parental care for their young.

Adam

Quote from: KarEn on October 19, 2006, 04:51:09 PM

I would change the position of your heater. Very visible. Why don't you put it in the corner?



likewise
150 Gallon Mbuna: 2 M. baliodigma, 5 Ps. sp. "Deep Magunga", 3 L. caeruleus, 3 Ps. demasoni, 1 P. Spilotonus 'Albino Taiwan Reef', 2 C. afra "Cobue", 2 Ancistrus sp.-144, 5 Ps. Acei, 1 Albino Ancistrus spp. L-144, Various fry

20 Gallon Long Reef: 1 Gramma melacara, 1 Pseudocheilinus hexataenia, 2 Lysmata amboinensis, 2 Lysmata wurdemanni, snails, hermits, crabs, mushrooms, SPS, rare zoanthids, palythoas, ricordea, favites, cloves, acans, candycanes leathers