Dear Green Aqua! I think Tommy is skilled enough to make his own masterclass with stones. No matter what was between Tommy and stones before.👀😅 From Russia with love!
It would be nice if aquarists used the geological names of the rocks rather than these marketing names. That would actually tell you something about the physical properties of the rock and how it might influence water chemistry. I know it can be figured out but it would save doing density, moh's hardness, and acid base reactions tests on the rock.
Love ur vids and tatorials and all the deep info. Had my first 15gal planted tank for abiut 5 months now with gravel substrate and fish was orgiginaly for the kid. Just got a used 32 gallon fluval tank that needs some cleaning and scratch removal that im going to try my had at a true aquadcaped carpeted tank. Gona take this one slow and get it right. Thank u for all the information you share with the world
I just finished my very first aquascape up a couple months ago. But each time I see a Green Aqua video my mind begins to race with ideas for the next one.
I am also a beginner of few months like you and feel exactly the same! Let your tank mature, reach it's prime (within 4-6 months) and take a "final look" photo so you can tear it down and start a new scape :)
I loved the video! Better saying: I loved the Aquascaping Mini Class we've got this time! Thanks, Tamás! Thanks, Green Aqua! Cheers from Brazil!🇧🇷 (Professor Klebber)
I learned quite a lot from your teachings Tommy. You inspire me. Got some nice ideas to create a nice scape with my rocks that I was struggling with and with the various woods that I am using now. Busy with my first 1.2m x 50cm x50cm tank. So excited.
Thank you so much for your easy tips! I've been struggling a bit about what rocks I can use. Now I've got to find a video about the different kinds of drift wood and what can we use in our freshwater aquariums. TY👍
wow...bonus video. tommy always come back with amazing tips for us. perfects hardscape materials. i never use seriya rocks and iron woods , i want to try them this year...
Awesome video, thank you for that. How do you solve issue that a lot of stones increase KH with combination of co2? I have seiryu stones and co2 because of plants and KH is every day one degree higher.
Super Tommy ! pour ma part je prefere le bois uniquement . mais videos instructive , bravo ! peut avoir des nouvelles de Mister Grubber ce beau Betta ? 👌👌
I also tend to put some smaller rocks inside aquasoil "paths" from back to front where I don't have actual hardscape. They will act similiar to wall in your mixed scape and help with holding elevation. Plants will also help with holding the hills when they root.
Lots of good infos here! Thanks Tommy :D In my region we also have access to Eucalyptus roots, they come in lots of different shapes and sizes and I love using them in my scapes.
Any thoughts on manzanita wood? I have 2 large branches in my tank but it's quite pricey to build a more complex look with just manzanita, so I'm thinking of adding some smaller redmoor branches.
Iron wood is not a specific type of wood but a class of woods that includes several hard and high density woods. Some drift woods can also be iron woods. By the way, not all iron woods will colour the water. That entirely depends on the amount of tannins they have.
The usual electric conductivity (EC) target is 230-320 µS/cm (some fish or invertebrates might need different values). This will be TDS around 150-200 ppm if using a TDS 640 scale. You might need to use Reverse Osmosis water to get to these levels. _Please be extremely careful with the units!!!_ If not, you will be comparing apples and oranges. For historical reasons, aquarists use TDS to measure dissolved solid in the water, instead of measuring electric conductivity (EC). EC is measured in micro Siemens/cm (µs/cm), while TDS is in ppm. The problem with TDS is that there are different measuring scales depending on the type of dissolved substances you want to measure. If you do not use the correct scale, then you will end up with a significant measurement error. So, if you get a TDS probe, you must know exactly which TDS scale is being used (which may not even be appropriate for a freshwater aquarium). To make matters more complicated, different countries use different TDS scales! So, you cannot compare TDS values unless you know exactly which scale was used. This means that 120 ppm TDS in the US (500, 550 or 640 scale) is not the same as 120 ppm TDS in Europe (usually 640 scale), or in Australia (sometimes 700 scale). If you read internet forums and webpages, usually they just say ppm, and do not say which TDS scale was used, which makes the information useless. A much simpler alternative is to use a probe that measures the standard EC instead of non standard TDS. If you want to use TDS then you must learn how to properly read and convert the values.
Hello. I bought elephant skin stone. Could you be able to tell how much rise in pH / GH this stone causes. ? Is it good for freshwater planted high tech tank ?
So even the petrified stone alters the the water paramethers? I'm looking for something that don't raise my kh (and I don't like lavic stone and slate too much). What would be a good choice for a ryoboku style?
There are dozens of types of petrified wood. Some woods petrified in carbonate rich environments, while others in silicate rich environments. The former will change the dKH, the latter not that much. You will never know unless you measure the effect of the rock on the water. Sedimentary rocks (such as limestone, sandstone and other soft stones) usually contain a high percentage of carbonates and can significantly change the dKH. How much depends on the stability of the rock and other factors (for example, sandstone is more stable than limestone). Igneous and Metamorphic rocks (lava rock, granite, basalt, quartzite, ...) would be your best choice since they have high amount of silicates and low amount of carbonates. However, even these rocks can contain layers of carbonates that will change the dKH. If you perform regular water changes and start with a low dKH water (e.g. from RO), you can keep the pH and dKH under control. Moreover, fish and plants do not care about the dKH level.
Great video, but you upset me a bit with those Monten stones. Yesterday I just launched the tank with them. Mine are those original ADAs and I heard they don't raise GH and KH that much ... Do you know more about them? I run a 100% RO aquarium. Will 50% water changes every week solve this problem? Greetings.
@LukaszTiger I reacted in the same way as you regarding Manten stone. From your experience, does it affect TDS/KH/GH? I believe they use the same name in the video, but it is not the same type as from ADA.
You said you would make a way with sand in the last scape on top of the soil. How do you do that? My sand way would disappear within days, falling down to the front or into the soil since sand is heavier than the soil.
I have a piece of petrified Redwood that my great grandmother got from the petrified forest in California back before it was against the law to take the petrified wood away. Could I use it in my tank? I think my family would get a huge kick out of it getting a second life but am unsure of petrified redwood. Thank you.
Sure you can. Soak it for a couple of weeks and wash it thoroughly several times during the soaking period (ideally with a pressure washer and brush; do not use detergents, bleach or similar). Any rock, including petrified wood, can contain some carbonates, which can increase the dKH and pH of the water. But this can be tested (with a pH meter and a TDS/conductivity meter). You can actually check if the pH of the water you used for soaking the wood changes over time. "Dangerous" rocks are the one that include significant amount of metals (like copper, zinc, cadmium). However, petrified wood will have none of those. But a small increase of the pH and dKH is not a problem at all and can be very easily controlled with regular water changes.
@@ampac if it is petrified does it not make it inert? I've been watching several vids talking about petrified wood saying that unlike stone or wood it won't change the chemical balance of your tank at all. I planned to give it a thorough blasting to remove all dirt for sure. By why the soaking? Confused on this.
@@robinbeasley4591 the soaking is just to help removing the dirt. Petrified wood usually does not change the water parameters, but it all depends on how the original wood mineralized over time. petrified wood is often based on silica, which is mostly inert. But it can also mineralize as rock with carbonate content. In any case, the changes in water parameters, if any, are usually low and gradual. Just make sure the rock is clean and do not worry.
Dragon wood? That's just Malaysian driftwood. It comes in many shapes. Long, smooth branches, as seen in the Florestas Submersas layout, the rarer perforated-type seen here dubbed as 'Dragon Wood' & finally, dull-looking, chunky stumps for plecos to chew on.
I have few question regarding drift wood in nature I have few woods I bot from nature and cleaned it some of them gets drown into water but releases yellow tint within 15 days and this is repeated for almost 4 months some of the wood I bot from nature has very little tint but is floating even after it is in the tank for more than 2 weeks I am going to setup my new aqua scaping tank (tank size 57" x 18" x 15") and i m having 2 options 1] to search more wood in nature - pros - zero cost for wood with more options - develop connection with nature and a habit which will help me build experience the way most of the legends had done cons - not sure of the effect of wood on water conditions - not sure if the cost saving for wood has adverse effect and instead i need to pay more on other solutions - need lot of time and effort 2] To buy wood in aquarium shop -- save lot of time and effort cons -- expensive -- may have to choose from limited stock of woods and shop keeper may not allow that I have same question with respect to stones I can find lot of videos and material online for stones and woods internationally but not from India
Nice video! Now we need 45 minutes of the last 15 minutes of this one, with in depth tips and tricks as to how to place rocks and wood !
Missing the plastic skeleton bubbler holding a treasure chest
Dear Green Aqua! I think Tommy is skilled enough to make his own masterclass with stones.
No matter what was between Tommy and stones before.👀😅
From Russia with love!
Ive been trying to get my hardscape to look good for a long time and this guy put together three beautiful scapes in 10 minutes 😭
😀👍🗻
It's the years of experience that built up to those 3 minutes. Bro is an artist
It's always good to see Tommy work with stones... He wanted to keep the build obviously... 😎
Yup he quite enjoy the scapes with stones. Actually a new build is coming soon with him 👍
@@GreenAquaShop Waiting for it... Cheers...
Спасибо!
It would be nice if aquarists used the geological names of the rocks rather than these marketing names. That would actually tell you something about the physical properties of the rock and how it might influence water chemistry. I know it can be figured out but it would save doing density, moh's hardness, and acid base reactions tests on the rock.
Ow does one get rid of the tannins on the driftwood? Ive had tannins for 2 years no and it just won't go away. I've tried Boling it and still no luck
Watching Sir Tommy do this without even single sweat is a true example of knowledge creates beauty comfortably. cheers to Green Aqua as always!
#1 video so far for 2022, thank you from NYC
Grazie Tommy, ottimi suggerimenti arrivati al momento giusto ! Emanuele
The best aquascaping video for beginners
Love ur vids and tatorials and all the deep info. Had my first 15gal planted tank for abiut 5 months now with gravel substrate and fish was orgiginaly for the kid. Just got a used 32 gallon fluval tank that needs some cleaning and scratch removal that im going to try my had at a true aquadcaped carpeted tank. Gona take this one slow and get it right. Thank u for all the information you share with the world
Hey! You guys must hear this all the time, but anyway: great videos! Amazing content! Keep doing it, it brings me so much joy. Thanks
I watch Green Aqua videos for a year before I took the plunge. I now have a 350 and a 190 (corner) litre tank built the Green Aqua way.
I just finished my very first aquascape up a couple months ago. But each time I see a Green Aqua video my mind begins to race with ideas for the next one.
I am also a beginner of few months like you and feel exactly the same! Let your tank mature, reach it's prime (within 4-6 months) and take a "final look" photo so you can tear it down and start a new scape :)
I loved the video! Better saying: I loved the Aquascaping Mini Class we've got this time!
Thanks, Tamás! Thanks, Green Aqua!
Cheers from Brazil!🇧🇷
(Professor Klebber)
Wow the iron stone!! It's awesome
It is!
America LOVES Tommy!!!
Many good tips! Especially in creating depth with large pieces in front and smaller or thinner ones at the back
Thanks for your comment! Glad to hear you find it helpful! Happy aquascaping! 😀👍
I learned quite a lot from your teachings Tommy. You inspire me. Got some nice ideas to create a nice scape with my rocks that I was struggling with and with the various woods that I am using now. Busy with my first 1.2m x 50cm x50cm tank. So excited.
Good luck with the scape. Gogogo!
Excellent presentation, a learning experience 👏
Thanks for your words 👍
Thank you so much for your easy tips! I've been struggling a bit about what rocks I can use. Now I've got to find a video about the different kinds of drift wood and what can we use in our freshwater aquariums. TY👍
Thank you soooo much 🙌🏻 and have a nice day 💁🏼♀️
You're welcome! Cheers.
A complete package video. Love it. Greeting from indonesia👍
Thanks for watching from such a distance 👍
Это невероятно! Три сборки за 30 минут! Спасибо, Виктор! Каждый раз учусь чему-то новому ❤️
Great educational video and I saw a big smile when Tommy started the rock only layout. Happy New Year guys...
Thanks for your kind words and your support. 😇🙏
Спасибо за полезное обучающие видео! Надо больше такого контента.
Thanks for your feedback, appreciate that 👍🙂
Wow love the quick scapes you've built so fast and so quickly and so naturally. Love all of your videos and can't wait for the next one
Fantastic video, great topic! Thank you for sharing! - Little Bobby
I have waiting for a video like that, thank you :)
Very informative Tommy! Now I know what’s wrong with my scape. Thank you! ❤
wow...bonus video. tommy always come back with amazing tips for us. perfects hardscape materials. i never use seriya rocks and iron woods , i want to try them this year...
Very didactic video Tommy!!!! Thanks si much
I cant wait to see tommy on tropica live
do you primary use black seiryu rocks in your aquascape ir regular ones?
I love this video a lot. Thanks for the detailed explanation and examples.
You are welcome, glad you found this useful.
Good job Tommy, perfect video
Very nice. You have a gift.
Very good clip. I enjoyed this. Gives Me inspiraționale for fluture builds. You should do more vids Like this. Great Work ! 👏🏻✌🏻
Go Tommy go!
Thanks for the support 😃
I've boiled my Red Moor in a pot for an hour, that removed most of the tannins, plus it made it accelerated the sinking process by a lot.
great vid guys! can you do the same but with pants? be nice to have a series that show the plants grow cycle.
Very informative video, many thanks Tommy...👏👏👏👏
Thanks, Tommy) and what can I do with kH+ and gH+ stones? In plant aquarium with osmosis water.
We learn every day🙏thanks a lot again 💪😎
Very informative videos, there much more to learn sir😊
Awesome video, thank you for that. How do you solve issue that a lot of stones increase KH with combination of co2? I have seiryu stones and co2 because of plants and KH is every day one degree higher.
Makes a stunning finish look way too easy, id love to have Tommy build a tank for me
Super Tommy ! pour ma part je prefere le bois uniquement . mais videos instructive , bravo ! peut avoir des nouvelles de Mister Grubber ce beau Betta ? 👌👌
Awesome Videos and Information!!👍👍👍👍
I also tend to put some smaller rocks inside aquasoil "paths" from back to front where I don't have actual hardscape. They will act similiar to wall in your mixed scape and help with holding elevation. Plants will also help with holding the hills when they root.
Can you guys do an tutorial on how to make like mountains and such for the background of the tank?
Lots of good infos here! Thanks Tommy :D
In my region we also have access to Eucalyptus roots, they come in lots of different shapes and sizes and I love using them in my scapes.
Thank you .. love your info
Excellent👍👍
🙏😃
As always we learn a lot, so thank you Tommy (it wouldn’t be a bad idea to plant the iwagumi…😁)
great video, do you have a similar one for plants? different types how fast they grow etc... new to aquascaping and your channel is great
Yes, check out the tutorial sections, or type in plant tutorial green aqua in the searchbox.
Great video
But a small correction, the white stuff that appears on the wood is not a fungus, but a bacterial film.
Yup you're right 👍
Hi, dark seiryu stones harden water less than normal seiryu?
Any thoughts on manzanita wood? I have 2 large branches in my tank but it's quite pricey to build a more complex look with just manzanita, so I'm thinking of adding some smaller redmoor branches.
Nagyon jó, és minőségi videó! ❤
Köszi 💚
Great mashup!
I like Indonesian sand stone.. very unique
Amazing video
Great video! Is Iron wood Mopani wood?
Thank you for the super informative video? Does iron wood go by any other common names? I cant find anything about it
Iron wood is not a specific type of wood but a class of woods that includes several hard and high density woods. Some drift woods can also be iron woods. By the way, not all iron woods will colour the water. That entirely depends on the amount of tannins they have.
Is there any dos and don'ts with certain stones when it comes to breaking them down into smaller pieces or different shapes?
does anyone have tried crushed limestone? it's awsome
That will harden the water, I would not do it.
Happy New Year 2022 🎄🎅🏼🎄
Nice to see you again 😜🤩
Hey Happy New Year to You as well 😃
30 minutes ago, This helped me so much :)
Glad to hear that 👍
Great video brotha! 👊👊👊
Thank you
Awesome!
Is Clithon Corona snails the same as Clithon Diadema?
great job
Thanks!
What should be the TDS of water of planted tanks like yours?
The usual electric conductivity (EC) target is 230-320 µS/cm (some fish or invertebrates might need different values). This will be TDS around 150-200 ppm if using a TDS 640 scale. You might need to use Reverse Osmosis water to get to these levels. _Please be extremely careful with the units!!!_ If not, you will be comparing apples and oranges. For historical reasons, aquarists use TDS to measure dissolved solid in the water, instead of measuring electric conductivity (EC). EC is measured in micro Siemens/cm (µs/cm), while TDS is in ppm. The problem with TDS is that there are different measuring scales depending on the type of dissolved substances you want to measure. If you do not use the correct scale, then you will end up with a significant measurement error. So, if you get a TDS probe, you must know exactly which TDS scale is being used (which may not even be appropriate for a freshwater aquarium). To make matters more complicated, different countries use different TDS scales! So, you cannot compare TDS values unless you know exactly which scale was used. This means that 120 ppm TDS in the US (500, 550 or 640 scale) is not the same as 120 ppm TDS in Europe (usually 640 scale), or in Australia (sometimes 700 scale). If you read internet forums and webpages, usually they just say ppm, and do not say which TDS scale was used, which makes the information useless. A much simpler alternative is to use a probe that measures the standard EC instead of non standard TDS. If you want to use TDS then you must learn how to properly read and convert the values.
Thanks for the detailed answer. Yeah, we aim for TDS 120.
Witaj. Tylko ten PETRIFIED WOOD STONE nie wpływa na parametry wody? Kamienie kwarcowe chyba też nie powinny? Pozdrawiam
Hello. I bought elephant skin stone. Could you be able to tell how much rise in pH / GH this stone causes. ? Is it good for freshwater planted high tech tank ?
I would see to see Tommy try to make an iwagumi in a nano cube tank!!
So even the petrified stone alters the the water paramethers? I'm looking for something that don't raise my kh (and I don't like lavic stone and slate too much). What would be a good choice for a ryoboku style?
There are dozens of types of petrified wood. Some woods petrified in carbonate rich environments, while others in silicate rich environments. The former will change the dKH, the latter not that much. You will never know unless you measure the effect of the rock on the water. Sedimentary rocks (such as limestone, sandstone and other soft stones) usually contain a high percentage of carbonates and can significantly change the dKH. How much depends on the stability of the rock and other factors (for example, sandstone is more stable than limestone). Igneous and Metamorphic rocks (lava rock, granite, basalt, quartzite, ...) would be your best choice since they have high amount of silicates and low amount of carbonates. However, even these rocks can contain layers of carbonates that will change the dKH. If you perform regular water changes and start with a low dKH water (e.g. from RO), you can keep the pH and dKH under control. Moreover, fish and plants do not care about the dKH level.
Great video, but you upset me a bit with those Monten stones. Yesterday I just launched the tank with them. Mine are those original ADAs and I heard they don't raise GH and KH that much ... Do you know more about them? I run a 100% RO aquarium. Will 50% water changes every week solve this problem? Greetings.
@LukaszTiger I reacted in the same way as you regarding Manten stone. From your experience, does it affect TDS/KH/GH? I believe they use the same name in the video, but it is not the same type as from ADA.
how significant frodo stones will change the water KH and GH?
Slightly and mostly in the early months. This is not like the grey stones like seiryu or manten for sure.
thank you 🙂
Thanks...
You said you would make a way with sand in the last scape on top of the soil. How do you do that? My sand way would disappear within days, falling down to the front or into the soil since sand is heavier than the soil.
Thank u
May I know the glass thickness of the aquariums that reach 100 gallons with hard scape ?
I would use 12-15 mm glass for that if it is rimless.
Cimbora az utolsó akváriumot csináld meg élesben :) nekem is tetszik
megcsináltadjuk majd vele. :) mármint a cimborával.
@@GreenAquaShop :D
I have a piece of petrified Redwood that my great grandmother got from the petrified forest in California back before it was against the law to take the petrified wood away. Could I use it in my tank? I think my family would get a huge kick out of it getting a second life but am unsure of petrified redwood. Thank you.
Sure you can. Soak it for a couple of weeks and wash it thoroughly several times during the soaking period (ideally with a pressure washer and brush; do not use detergents, bleach or similar). Any rock, including petrified wood, can contain some carbonates, which can increase the dKH and pH of the water. But this can be tested (with a pH meter and a TDS/conductivity meter). You can actually check if the pH of the water you used for soaking the wood changes over time. "Dangerous" rocks are the one that include significant amount of metals (like copper, zinc, cadmium). However, petrified wood will have none of those. But a small increase of the pH and dKH is not a problem at all and can be very easily controlled with regular water changes.
@@ampac if it is petrified does it not make it inert? I've been watching several vids talking about petrified wood saying that unlike stone or wood it won't change the chemical balance of your tank at all. I planned to give it a thorough blasting to remove all dirt for sure. By why the soaking? Confused on this.
@@robinbeasley4591 the soaking is just to help removing the dirt. Petrified wood usually does not change the water parameters, but it all depends on how the original wood mineralized over time. petrified wood is often based on silica, which is mostly inert. But it can also mineralize as rock with carbonate content. In any case, the changes in water parameters, if any, are usually low and gradual. Just make sure the rock is clean and do not worry.
It took me roughly a few hours to place 3 large stones in my tank and he does it in 5 mins
Hello, what is the size of the tank?
How to solve the lime stone raise the pH in aquarium? My tanks stay 7.1-7.4 pH when CO2 is switched off
Dragon wood? That's just Malaysian driftwood. It comes in many shapes. Long, smooth branches, as seen in the Florestas Submersas layout, the rarer perforated-type seen here dubbed as 'Dragon Wood' & finally, dull-looking, chunky stumps for plecos to chew on.
yeah but “Malaysian driftwood” doesn’t have that exotic ring that gets unsuspecting Americans to start emptying their retirement accounts
@@reytard2092 Oh... 😯
Still, Malaysians be wondering where the"dragon" part ties it all up, haha! 🤣
❤️❤️
Great! Y gratis.
I am from India, looking for Wild Rhino Stone.....Please let me know where i can get Wild Rhino Stones
I have few question regarding drift wood in nature
I have few woods I bot from nature and cleaned it
some of them gets drown into water but releases yellow tint within 15 days and this is repeated for almost 4 months
some of the wood I bot from nature has very little tint but is floating even after it is in the tank for more than 2 weeks
I am going to setup my new aqua scaping tank (tank size 57" x 18" x 15") and i m having 2 options
1] to search more wood in nature -
pros
- zero cost for wood with more options
- develop connection with nature and a habit which will help me build experience the way most of the legends had done
cons
- not sure of the effect of wood on water conditions
- not sure if the cost saving for wood has adverse effect and instead i need to pay more on other solutions
- need lot of time and effort
2] To buy wood in aquarium shop
-- save lot of time and effort
cons
-- expensive
-- may have to choose from limited stock of woods and shop keeper may not allow that
I have same question with respect to stones
I can find lot of videos and material online for stones and woods internationally but not from India
جميل جدا جدا
Hi Tommy, Do u know Sal from Impractical Joker's? He is ur look Alike Buddy
Sand and stones name please ..