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Please, explain.

2006-10-07 08:48:17 · 3 answers · asked by Viktor 3 in Education & Reference Trivia

I didn't mean this to be a joke. Sorry for that!

2006-10-07 09:06:42 · update #1

3 answers

Working from home and setting up a mail order tuning service

2006-10-08 00:03:37 · answer #1 · answered by Andrew 3 · 0 0

It all comes down to rushing. That is the most common mistake. People rush and don't wait for the cycle. They add too many fish at once. They rush into an impulse buy without researching the fish. They stock inappropriate types of fish together because they did not wait to do proper research etc. The second main issue is laziness. People slack on water changes, don't acclimate the fish, don't bother testing water, etc. People have a tenancy to ignore the invisible, but what you do not know can still hurt you (or in this case your fish). The Best advice is only act purposely, after doing research, planning, and waiting the needed time. You cannot force an aquarium to be sustainable, you have to work with the aquarium to make it sustainable. You should monitor your water quality, especially on a new tank or when adding fish. You should slowly and carefully acclimate fish. You need to do water changes at the frequency your water tests indicate you need to do water changes. Also, avoid overstocking. An overstocked tank is harder to take care of and even with diligent care can be so overstocked as to be completely unsustainable! A common mistake is to add too many fish, or too large of fish, for the tank you have.

2016-03-18 06:10:40 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Getting into the business with a deaf ear.

2006-10-07 08:49:55 · answer #3 · answered by Stuart 7 · 0 0

I wish when you make a joke, you'd have the decency to give the punch-line. It was a joke, wasn't it?

2006-10-07 08:58:01 · answer #4 · answered by DBG 2 · 0 0

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