waterdrop
Enthusiastic "Re-Beginner"
A tank like that will be really nice for a pair of angels! A great way to do it would be to introduce a nice big shoal of harlequins right after the fishless cycle. In my opinion they can be even hardier than zebra danios for this and a nice shoal of 8 or 10 at least would be great in your tank. It may be that a glowlight shoal would also be good, I'm not sure of their toughness, perhaps someone else will know but of course the cards/neons should wait and not be among the first. Depending on the species, the corys might also be among the first. Pandas and the pygmy ones should not, but many others would be fine. Corys really become fun starting at quantity 6. OK, so harlequins, corys and possibly one other shoal for after-fishless starters. Then wait a month or two (two filter cleanings that would be let's say) and by then you may have located some nice Dwarf Gouramis, perhaps getting the ideal 1 male, 2 females. Then another couple months goes by and if the water stats are great its time to start introducing the cardinal or neon shoal. Consider getting one or two more cardinals on each bring-home as often one or two is lost in transition, they are just that sensitive! Meanwhile you can have been looking around to find the phenotype/look of angels you want and a source and finally introduce them way at this later time when the tank will be even more stable. Its not that they're so sensitive, just that they are one of your centerpiece fish and you'd just like extra insurance as their cost may be greater.Thanks for that Oldman47, thats great news . That means i better finalise my stock then huh. Are dwarf gouramis and bn plecks ok to add to a freshly cycled tank? And possibly either, a nice shoul of copper harlequins or a type of tetra, maybe glowlight or cardinal and some corrys. Any recommendations? Bearing in mind i wouldnt mind a pair of angels.
- Dj -
~~waterdrop~~