Hi,
regarding the replacement of salt in the tank:
if you just replenish water that evaporated the salt will stay in the tank because it does not evaporate with the water.
If you actively change the water than you have to add the fraction of the salt that you took out because it was dissolved in the water.
I have not read every detail of this message tree so sorry if that came double...
Nora
--- In AquaticLife@yahoogroups.com, leehinckle@... wrote:
>
>
>
>
> At this time I have no testing supplies for ammonia and nitrites as soon as we have some money I will get a kit for that. I do have the ph. The ph in this area is very high. I used a whole bottle of PH down trying to get it down to the right level. Not all at once I used according to the directions. I never did get it quite down to the right level. When I went back into the pet store to get more I asked them how many bottles will I have to use and how to keep it at the right level. I was told the area water is very high in PH and as long as the fish are not sick and doing well, I don't have to worry about it. At that time they were all doing fine including the Molly. I do a partial water change once a month and at that time I put the stuff in the water for the chlorine. I have already put the salt in the tank like you said per the information of the pet store person and she told me I don't need to replace it once it is in the tank. All the other fish are still looking good. The black Molly now does not look like ick but some sort of fungus maybe or wounds but he still has white stuff coming off of him. The water temp as been running around 85 to 90 depending on the time of the day. I have not done anything to cool it off. All I could do in the HOT part of the day is do water changes every day and put in cooler water not sure if that is a good idea or not? We have a VERY small freezer and have no room for even an ice tray so don't have ice to throw in either.
>
> --- In AquaticLife@yahoogroups.com, sevenspringss@ wrote:
> >
> > Charles, Lee,
> >
> > I did mention to test for ammonia and nitrite -- and to make PWC's if any
> > are found. Clean water goes a lo o o ng way in keeping fish healthy, whether
> > they have Ich or any other malady such as I'm suspecting (due to possible
> > poor water conditions). The best way to keep fish healthy is not to subject
> > them to poor water conditions, but to keep their water free from organic
> > waste contaminents via regular PWC's.
> >
> > Ray</HTML>
> >
>
Please, DELETE this line and EVERYTHING below it when replying, Thank You.
·´¯`·.¸¸.><((((º>.·´¯`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸><((((º> ¸.·´¯`·.¸. , .·´¯`·..><((((º>
PLEASE, when you REPLY to a post, DELETE all TEXT that is NOT important to the reply & if CHANGING the TOPIC of the original message MODIFY the SUBJECT LINE -> i.e. "new subject (was re: old subject)" <-
<º((((><.·´¯`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸<º((((><¸.·´¯`·.¸. , .·´¯`·..<º((((><·´¯`·.¸¸.
We Thank You in Advance for Your HELP in this matter.
If you do not want all of the groups emails, instead of unsubscribing, you can change your delivery option by clicking on "Edit My Membership" on the home page.
Or e-mail aquaticlife-digest@yahoogroups.com to receive the digest, which includes up to 25 posts at a time in a single email
Or email aquaticlife-nomail@yahoogroups.com for the No E-Mail option where you will still be able to read messages on the group and post replies.
Or email aquaticlife-normal@yahoogroups.com to receive individual e-mails.
No comments:
Post a Comment