Hi TallDragon, what a wonderful tank! I'm hoping to set up a low tech tank in a month or so and was wondering if I could pick your brain? Are you still running the light(s) for a 6hr period? How has your Rotala/Ammania indica performed in this low-tech setup? Any plants that really didn't work/have melted away? I think your foreground is a mix of Blyxa and Eleocharis no? How have they performed? And lastly, are you fertilising at all?
A bit of a barrage of questions...Thanks in advance! There are many (amazing) high-tech setups on here but it's lovely to see the slower approach, it's no less pleasing 🙂
Hi BexHaystack,
Thanks for your your kind words. Here are the answers:
I am running a single 24w light now for two periods of the day: 7am-10am (This is so that I enjoy the tank in the morning), then 4pm-9pm to enjoy the afternoons and nights.
I dose 1,5ml of Easycarbo, but the tank was doing ok, when I wasn't doing any liquid carbon during fall and winter months. I do a regular waterchange: app. 40% (a bucket's worth) weekly. I have used JBL's fertilizer balls, but recently I tried the little Tropica pills and they are working nicely, especially on the new growth on the Hygrophila polysperma rosanervig at the back, on the left. Also, I have an air pump running during the night for 4 hours. I cannot confirm that it does much, but I doubt it hurts. I also use a mix of Micro and Macro element fertilizer mix, 2ml of each, per week after water change.
I think the Rotala indica is doing ok, in the spots where it has taken root and gets plenty of light. Some parts have just floated up after their stems sort of rotted away. But keep checking back.
Foreground is partly Eleocharis acicularis - which I would not recommend it is pretty pointless. The really dominating plant in the foreground is not Blyxa, but Echinodorus tenellus 'Green' which I added a year ago in
post #35. It has crept forward and is moving rightwards.
Plants that have not worked: pretty long list, read the journal!
🙂. But seriously, most things have survived and have grown slowly but surely. The
Ranunculus inundatus did melt away fully. That is the one I miss the most, as it had lovely texture and color. Also the Ludwigia palustris disappeared.
My favorite plants is the Ludwigia repens, front and center.