CanadaquaBetween Pond and Tanks

Update

While I’m still medicating and doing daily water changes, everyone looks a lot happier and healthier. The fins on the cories, which had been a bit ragged looking are hale and smooth again, and everyone’s active and eating like they got paid for it.

For some weird reason the diamonds refuse to recognize the NLS pellets as food. They’re always the first waiting when I open the lid and gobble up flakes and chase after bloodworms like lightening, but the pellets sail by them like so many grains of sand. Well, the catfish sure appreciate them.

This is where frogs go on vacation

At last count we had sixteen in and around the pond.

All new plants are potted and daylilies are blooming.

It’s not over

Well, seems like the diamond’s lost for good. I never found him. The glowlight was dead yesterday morning, and the day before I had discovered a new spot on one of the cories. So Friday I took a trip to my trusty LFS and cried them a river. The guy listened, asked some informed questions and recommended a different dechlorinator with my ich medication, but said otherwise to keep doing what I was doing, sometimes ich just took a second swipe. So yesterday I started treating again, this time without salt and with the temperature not as high as I had it the first time.

Also, cudgeling my brain for what else was going on (if the water didn’t test pristine every time, I would almost have suspected the dead tetras to have had ammonia poisoning from the descriptions I read).

I removed the pothos that was hanging in the tank and growing merrily in there. I had read up on it before allowing it in there and been told that lots of people grow it in their tanks without adverse effects, which is probably true as long as none of the sap is released. It seems that that can be an irritant to cats and dogs, and it might have been an additional stresser every time a leaf broke off or the fish nibbled on it. Anyway, I took it out yesterday and did a 50% WC, and the fish seem a lot happier this morning, eagerly going after their food. Even the neon that still keeps mostly to himself joined the fray.

So, I’m only guessing here as to reasons, but as far as I’m concerned, the only non-aquarium plants that go in my tank from now on are the ones I’m ready to eat.

Some more pictures

The woodlands view from the top of the waterfall:

We has a flower (water hyacinth).

Update

Plan B on the prowl through the reeds:

We bought new water plants, which have to be properly potted up now:

Update

The neon rejoined the crowd this morning, the glowlight’s hanging in there, and the diamond went into hiding. Haven’t found him yet. Hoping for the best. Everyone else seems fine.

Convalescent

Now that temps are back to normal and meds and salt levels decreasing due to daily water changes, all the catfish are their perky selves again.

The tetras are taking a little longer to get back on their fins, so to speak. Though most of them are acting normal, they’re still not eating as greedily as I was used to before the outbreak.

And I have three that are not well. One of the neons hangs perfectly still and by himself in the shadow by the heater, one diamond keeps coming to the surface for air and one glowlight is bloated and not eating. For the moment I’m keeping up the daily water changes, and hope that it’ll bring relief. Without any recognizable symptoms and all three seemingly with different difficulties, I don’t really know what else to do.

Ich

Been battling a nasty strain of ich these past weeks, lost a glowlight and three neon tetras and quite a bit of courage. I can only hope it’s over now. What brought it on I don’t know. The diamond tetras I bought last never seemed to have gotten it.

I can only guess that the stress of varying temperatures, summer heatwave vs. cooler days and nights brought it out. I’ll try keeping the temperature a little higher than I had it in the spring so the temp’s more constant. Maybe that’ll help. We’ll see. Meanwhile I closely supervise the survivors and count them even more obsessively every morning than I used to. Miraculously the cory baby took it all in stride.

The shrimp and snails seem fine in their exile bowl with daily water changes.