SammyW
Seedling
- Joined
- 3 Apr 2014
- Messages
- 7
Hello. I'm a newbie to aquacaping and despite doing a lot of planning and researching before attempting my first set up and it's already gone a bit wrong. 🙁
I was attempting to create two highish round foward sloping mounds of substrate for planting (with fertiliser underneath) and a sand path that runs through the middle and opens out at the front of the aquarium to create a beach effect. Each mound was built around two types of hardscape. On the right (as you look at it) a stone structure that is anchoring two soon to be (fingers crossed) moss trees, and the left is covering a large piece of bog wood that creates 'a cave' type structure. When constructing I held the substrate in place with two pieces of curved cardboard, I then filled the path space with the sand and then filled the tank by siphoning the water in to a watering can, which I then pored in to a low bowl over the sand as not to disturb it. So far so good. However the one thing I didn't do was put plastic bags over the mounds because I was planting as I went. Needless to say I've now got brown substrate all over my lovely path that now looks a mess which was made even worse when I took away the cardboard support and my 'mounds' are more like flat hills now and have spread all over the sand.
So what I'd really like to know is:
Is there a way to save the path now the water is in it? Draining it and starting it again is not an option it'll have to stay that way if I can't.
And despite using specific aquarium sand my tank is really cloudy. Will this settle?
I'm feeling really disheartened at the moment. I'm hoping once the plants start to grow and it starts taking off I'll get my enthusiasm back.
Oh, and one more question. I have an additional lighting tube to add to the lid of my aquarium. As it not being submerged can I used any old glue to hold the tube ends in place or should that be aquarium friendly too, Do I need to buy aquarium sealant?
Many thanks in advance for any advice given.
I was attempting to create two highish round foward sloping mounds of substrate for planting (with fertiliser underneath) and a sand path that runs through the middle and opens out at the front of the aquarium to create a beach effect. Each mound was built around two types of hardscape. On the right (as you look at it) a stone structure that is anchoring two soon to be (fingers crossed) moss trees, and the left is covering a large piece of bog wood that creates 'a cave' type structure. When constructing I held the substrate in place with two pieces of curved cardboard, I then filled the path space with the sand and then filled the tank by siphoning the water in to a watering can, which I then pored in to a low bowl over the sand as not to disturb it. So far so good. However the one thing I didn't do was put plastic bags over the mounds because I was planting as I went. Needless to say I've now got brown substrate all over my lovely path that now looks a mess which was made even worse when I took away the cardboard support and my 'mounds' are more like flat hills now and have spread all over the sand.
So what I'd really like to know is:
Is there a way to save the path now the water is in it? Draining it and starting it again is not an option it'll have to stay that way if I can't.
And despite using specific aquarium sand my tank is really cloudy. Will this settle?
I'm feeling really disheartened at the moment. I'm hoping once the plants start to grow and it starts taking off I'll get my enthusiasm back.
Oh, and one more question. I have an additional lighting tube to add to the lid of my aquarium. As it not being submerged can I used any old glue to hold the tube ends in place or should that be aquarium friendly too, Do I need to buy aquarium sealant?
Many thanks in advance for any advice given.