Jamie D.
New Member
I've been away awhile - had surgery, had complications, lost King Louie (R.I.P), my beautiful pearl gourami to...something while I was barely caring for myself. Needless to say, my 38 gallon was looking a bit quiet with just the two plecos (clown and leopard frog) skulking around the bottom.
Anyways...went to the fish shop yesterday looking for some nice schooling fish and perhaps a honey gourami if they had a "real" one. Priscilla tetras caught my eye, and I bought eight of them, and then allowed myself to be talked into a "blue paradise gourami" they had in back instead of the honey I was looking at (*eyeroll*).
Yes, I know. A very tiny bit of research when I got home and then watching Eddie (Mr. Paradise Fish) do some initial chasing of the tetras drove home the stupidity of my impulse purchase. I am happy to say he's still a baby, so the tetras are currently the same size he is, and they're faster for the moment, so everyone seems to be tentatively getting along this morning. However, Eddie needs his own place, because I'm not willing to put the tetras at risk long term (I plan on getting 4 more if these do okay for the week), and I still want Sterbai cories for that tank, which from what I've read, he'd be a potential risk for them too when he grows up.
So...I have a stand that will fit a 20 gal. standard tank (or a 25 tall), and I've been planning on setting one up anyways (not for this, but hey, plans change). I know longs are generally better, but for Eddie's bachelor pad (and maybe a bristlenose - they seem to be listed as good tank mates consistently), will that be a decent amount of room? It will be heavily planted, of course, with sand substrate, rocks and driftwood. I have two tanks that really need to be thinned out, plant-wise, so that's easy enough.
I've read anywhere from 10 gal to 30 gal minimum for paradise fish on different sites, but 20 seems to be the most common. Given I've already sort of hosed this up though, I figured I'd confirm here before I go shopping, especially since all the different sites seem to list these guys at anywhere from 1.5 -4 inches when full grown, so I'm not even really sure what to expect there.
Thanks for helping me figure out how to fix my little impulsive mistake!
Anyways...went to the fish shop yesterday looking for some nice schooling fish and perhaps a honey gourami if they had a "real" one. Priscilla tetras caught my eye, and I bought eight of them, and then allowed myself to be talked into a "blue paradise gourami" they had in back instead of the honey I was looking at (*eyeroll*).
Yes, I know. A very tiny bit of research when I got home and then watching Eddie (Mr. Paradise Fish) do some initial chasing of the tetras drove home the stupidity of my impulse purchase. I am happy to say he's still a baby, so the tetras are currently the same size he is, and they're faster for the moment, so everyone seems to be tentatively getting along this morning. However, Eddie needs his own place, because I'm not willing to put the tetras at risk long term (I plan on getting 4 more if these do okay for the week), and I still want Sterbai cories for that tank, which from what I've read, he'd be a potential risk for them too when he grows up.
So...I have a stand that will fit a 20 gal. standard tank (or a 25 tall), and I've been planning on setting one up anyways (not for this, but hey, plans change). I know longs are generally better, but for Eddie's bachelor pad (and maybe a bristlenose - they seem to be listed as good tank mates consistently), will that be a decent amount of room? It will be heavily planted, of course, with sand substrate, rocks and driftwood. I have two tanks that really need to be thinned out, plant-wise, so that's easy enough.
I've read anywhere from 10 gal to 30 gal minimum for paradise fish on different sites, but 20 seems to be the most common. Given I've already sort of hosed this up though, I figured I'd confirm here before I go shopping, especially since all the different sites seem to list these guys at anywhere from 1.5 -4 inches when full grown, so I'm not even really sure what to expect there.
Thanks for helping me figure out how to fix my little impulsive mistake!