rockies
Member
I have a 50 gallon setup with sand (2 inches), CC (2 inches) an UGF. I also have powerheads on 2 uplift tubes for the UGF and a hangon filter for mechanical (& biological) filtration. I've learned from several sources that my "The Complete Aquarium" book was misleading when it recommended the UGF and it seems like good advice to remove it.
My question is how to remove it safely. The tank is only a week old and I've had 2 tomato clowns for 5 days. (NTS I suppose). So I'm starting to get some ammonia, but not a lot.
My plan is to do a water change (turns out the salt I used was not the best I could have, now I'm going to use Instant Ocean, instead of Red Sea) and remove the UGF at that time. I'll just keep the powerheads mounted to the glass to provide water movement and I'd like to simply keep the substrate (CC and sand) that I have now.
I figure I'll just place the 2 tomato clowns in a holding bowl while I do the messy work to pull up the UGF. The water will be incredibly cloudy after this (it was when I first added water to the tank even after rinsing the sand multiple times). The filter does a pretty good job filtering out the water in a few hours.
Is there a better way to accomplish this?
Thanks,
Allen
My question is how to remove it safely. The tank is only a week old and I've had 2 tomato clowns for 5 days. (NTS I suppose). So I'm starting to get some ammonia, but not a lot.
My plan is to do a water change (turns out the salt I used was not the best I could have, now I'm going to use Instant Ocean, instead of Red Sea) and remove the UGF at that time. I'll just keep the powerheads mounted to the glass to provide water movement and I'd like to simply keep the substrate (CC and sand) that I have now.
I figure I'll just place the 2 tomato clowns in a holding bowl while I do the messy work to pull up the UGF. The water will be incredibly cloudy after this (it was when I first added water to the tank even after rinsing the sand multiple times). The filter does a pretty good job filtering out the water in a few hours.
Is there a better way to accomplish this?
Thanks,
Allen