Hello everyone! I'm moving in a month and a half and when I do I can finally set up my tank. I have a ten gallon I'm going to be using, now I'm just trying to decide on the supplies I need to get. I'm planning on using black blasting sand as substrate because it's oodles cheaper than fish gravel and it will look pretty. I have a sponge filter I'm going to be using and a heater from a previous tank, not that I'll need it for the shrimpy babies considering I live in Florida, but I'll put it in just in case we get a cold snap. In my current apartment the bedrooms don't stay warm for love nor money and my old set up dipped to 50 (Google says 10 C) during one cold snap.
I'm not at all sure what I'm going to be doing as far as lighting goes. My tank is one of those starter kits with two dinky little LEDs, so I want to upgrade, but I like having a lid of some kind on it so I'm not sure if I should get a new hood or if there's some kind of stand-up, desk-type lamp that I can use instead.
I'm also planning on getting some marimo balls and potentially a few other plants. I'm hoping if I can get the plants now I can start slowly acclimating them to brackish water.
I'm a little torn when it comes to rocks, I'll probably look at getting something lighter to contrast with the sand, but is there any chance anyone knows how to check to see if a rock that's not intended for use in aquariums is safe (won't leech metals into the water) or should I stick to pet stores for that? Also I know wood is a no-go because it will lower the pH, but petrified wood is safe right? I wonder if coquina is an option...
And then animals, I'm still trying to decide how many shrimp I should get to start out and where I should get them from. I'd get them here, but like I said, I'm in the US. I'm debating asking some local places how much it would be to have them order some, it may be a bit more expensive per shrimp but there'd be no shipping and I'd be supporting local business. My reservation is that I'm not sure if they'd get bred shrimp or wild shrimp and I'd obviously prefer the former. The snails I can definitely get local though. Should I get them now as well to acclimate them to the salt or should they be good to just pop in?
Does all of that sound okay? Is there something big I forgot? Does anyone have any suggestions?
Anything and everything will be wholeheartedly appreciated!
I'm not at all sure what I'm going to be doing as far as lighting goes. My tank is one of those starter kits with two dinky little LEDs, so I want to upgrade, but I like having a lid of some kind on it so I'm not sure if I should get a new hood or if there's some kind of stand-up, desk-type lamp that I can use instead.
I'm also planning on getting some marimo balls and potentially a few other plants. I'm hoping if I can get the plants now I can start slowly acclimating them to brackish water.
I'm a little torn when it comes to rocks, I'll probably look at getting something lighter to contrast with the sand, but is there any chance anyone knows how to check to see if a rock that's not intended for use in aquariums is safe (won't leech metals into the water) or should I stick to pet stores for that? Also I know wood is a no-go because it will lower the pH, but petrified wood is safe right? I wonder if coquina is an option...
And then animals, I'm still trying to decide how many shrimp I should get to start out and where I should get them from. I'd get them here, but like I said, I'm in the US. I'm debating asking some local places how much it would be to have them order some, it may be a bit more expensive per shrimp but there'd be no shipping and I'd be supporting local business. My reservation is that I'm not sure if they'd get bred shrimp or wild shrimp and I'd obviously prefer the former. The snails I can definitely get local though. Should I get them now as well to acclimate them to the salt or should they be good to just pop in?
Does all of that sound okay? Is there something big I forgot? Does anyone have any suggestions?
Anything and everything will be wholeheartedly appreciated!