So, I got a question from someone via the mail thing and I figured it was good info that I hadn't shared before and that I'd post it here.
Here's the post:
The big green mass on the left is Ceratophyllum demersum. The green leaves growing up and around the rocks are anubias nana. The plants in the back right are Myriophyllum aquaticum, and the ones in the very front on the right are Bacopa monieri.
No, they're not hard to grow. I have kitty litter substrate, so the two rooted plants, Myrophyllum and Bacopa, have very healthy root structures that they don't grow in gravel. If you try to grow those two plants in gravel, they will just die. But in kitty litter they absolutely thrive. It's great.
Link: http://www.thekrib.c...rate-jamie.html
I paid about $6 for 50 pounds of kitty litter, Special Kitty brand at Walmart.
My light is this light from Home Depot, and it's just resting on the top of the tank. Light: http://www.homedepot...catalogId=10053
It cost $20 and the bulbs were two 700 lumen, 6500 K bulbs for $8 total.
I basically ignore my tank. I never feed the Elassoma gilberti adults (they eat the California blackworms that live in the substrate) except to drop in a couple pellets once a week or so for the worms to eat. I add microworms to the tank about every other day, but I'm getting rotifer eggs in the mail so I'm eliminating microworms I hope in the future. Then it will truly be a "no maintenance" tank. You just have to look in it every now and then to make sure the populations are doing well. I check it to make sure there are still worms in there every now and then. There are.
So the total cost of my tank was, including shipping costs:
$25 for 55 gallon tank used on craigslist, no lid or anything
$45 for the hang on back waterfall AquaClear 55 gallon rated filter
$6.50 for 50 pounds of Special Kitty brand litter
$20 for light fixture
$8 for bulbs
$8 for myriophyllum starter plants on aquabid
$25 for anubias plants on aquabid
$30 for ceratophyllum plant package on aquabid
$8 for bacopa on aquabid
$3 for microworm culture
$20 for california blackworms
$15 for rotifer eggs
and then the fish, which I got from a fellow NANFA member.
Total cost of tank: $214.
That's actually a bit more expensive than I thought it had been. *shrugs* I guess little things add up. Still, I spent more on textbooks this semester. I think I'll post that cost breakdown on the main Elassoma page, to give people an idea of the setup costs.
Oh, but I just wanted to point out that I've made back my money on the plants because I sell the extra bits that grow. So they did technically cost me $71, yes, but because I sell the new shoots every couple of weeks, I think I've made that back.
I don't think that people should view fishkeeping as a hobby limited to the wealthy. It's very possible to own fish regardless of what your income status is. Even a poor college student like me can find a way to make it work. If you like fish and if you learn enough about how to keep them happy, then you can make it work.
Edited by EricaWieser, 20 January 2011 - 11:49 AM.