Thursday, March 24, 2016

16 Gallon Bowfront Aquascape




Hello everybody, this is Will Hardy from HardyAquariums coming in hot with another blog post!
The 16 gallon bow front started it all for me. It was the first tank I ever bought, back in 2010.

Ode to 16g:
You mesmerized me with your misshapen glass
While I gaze at the fish, sitting on my ass,
Bright blue gravel, green plants to match
If only I knew, it wouldn't be the first batch
16 gallons to start, more and more I sought
Look at us now, HardyAquariums COMING IN HOT!





At first it had blue gravel, platies,  guppies, and tiger barbs. Don't forget the lucky bamboo to ensure sure failure with aquatic plant keeping!





I stepped my game up and bought some black sand, anubias plants, rasboras, white skirt tetras, and a pleco. This was the start of something good, but still not quite right. The background is still with the tank today in 2016. See my first video of this setup ever!!





Now we are getting to some abstract, river rock/fin type aquascaping. This form of aquascaping is popular in the San Diego apartment scene. This was actually a cool setup in the apartment, and I especially enjoy the german blue ram. 



Now we are really onto something. This is when the 16g really started coming together. As you can see, the tank is made to look natural with driftwood, anubias, java fern, and aponogeton plants. Check out a classic video of this setup here!





The finished product! 



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Sunday, January 17, 2016

Giant Hygrophila Care (Hygrophila Corymbosa)


Giant Hygrophila Care (Hygrophila Corymbosa)

Care Level: Easy
Stem: Big A.F. 2'+
Leaves: 7"+
Biotope: Thailand, India, Malaysia, Indonesia
Light: Low
Video: Giant Hygro Care Video
Youtube: HardyAquariums Youtube Channel




Biological Classification (Video soon to come)

Kingdom: Plantae
Phylum: Angiosperms
Class: Eudicots
Order: Lamiales
Family: Athanceae
Genus: Hygrohphila
Species: H. Corymbosa


Uses in the Aquarium

Nitrate Buster: This monster plant supposedly gets rid of nitrates, but I haven't noticed many changes with my tank. Really though, i'm just bitter that I have so much algae. The plant can be propagated easily by cutting the stem and replanting. It can also be floated. The plant grows quickly, and other forms of hygrophila like Hygrophila Difformis are also known to reduce nitrates and ammonia.

Background: Giant hygro would make a sexy background in a deep tank. It has so much potential to fill in empty areas in a background, however a 55g is too small to aquascape with this plant. As you can see below, it fills in nicely, however it takes up almost half the depth of the tank. Now there's no room for other plants.

High Tech vs. Low Tech

High Tech: The first setup is a high tech 55g tank with Co2 and high light. Here this shit grows faster than my black beard algae. It has large leaves, some getting 7 inches long, and as it reaches the top of the tank, the leaves turn a nice pink color. I am using eco complete in my high tech tank, and the hygro seems to do well with this substrate.
(High tech 55g)


Low Tech: The second setup with giant hygro is in a low tech 16g bowfront tank with black sand and low light. Here, the plant also grows well, just not as fast or as dense as the high tech tank. This is probably an obvious outcome. The plant shows brightly colored green leaves. I keep cherry shrimp, bristlenose pleco, and pseudomugil furcatas in the 16g. Them cherry shrimp keep the leaves real clean.



Thursday, December 24, 2015

Hardy Angelfish: Pinoy Angelfish

Pinoy Angelfish

Angelfish are a badass species of freshwater cichlids that have been kept in the aquarium hobby as early as the 1920's. They are voracious eaters and many refer to them as being "fat-assed."

There are so many different genetic variations of angelfish, it's hard to know what kind is really in your aquarium. Currently I keep philippine blue (Pb) gene angelfish. One is a blue smokey and the other is a pinoy. In this blog I will talk about the Pinoy angelfish. 

The Pinoy angelfish is a mix between a black gene and a blue gene. Below is a young Pinoy, maybe 1.5 years old.
(1.5 year old Pinoy)
Discovery:
A man by the name of Ken Kennedy, or as I like to call him, "Papa Blueboy" first discovered the blue angelfish gene in the early 2000's. That is crazy shit! Less than 20 years ago, a whole new variety of angelfish was discovered. We are talking about angelfish here! The fish that people buy to substitute for expensive ass discus. The fish that everyone knows about, but is still highly underrated. You know, the fish that are literally aquatic angels. 

Anyway, Ken Kennedy started breeding angelfish to expose this blue gene, and Dr. Frankeneinstein essentially created the Pinoy, Paraiba, Blue Zebra, Wide Fins, Blue Smokeys, and many more. 

The warlocks below are Blue Zebra Angelfish  


Feeding:
Pinoy angelfish eat just like any other angelfish, however their pickiness depends on what the previous owner fed them. The Pinoy above was probably fed flake food as a juvenile, and quickly took to flakes, premium pellets, and will even eat veggie wafers. They love supplemental blood worms, brine shrimp, and even cherry shrimp when the colony gets overpopulated. 

Sexing
Angelfish are just one of those species that are hard to identify as male or female. I believe this is a female, because as she gets older, her ovipositor (basically her coochy) is exposed. There are other methods of sexing angelfish that involve humps on the head, and/or fin size, but those aren't always accurate. 



Thank you for reading this blog. Watch me on youtube for more fish fun!