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Thanks heaps for all the updates and photos. Tank looks amazing, as is all the equipment installed to run it. Very jealous!!
I've only ever tried dirted tanks and sand cap.
I was going to try an all aqua soil tank next but this has now given me inspiration to maybe try this first!
I also have a similar size tank with a full blyxa carpet (my favorite plant) but I think that might be the tank I'll experiment on. Its been running 18 months and is due for an over haul. So a BDBS or similar as the substrate sounds like a good plan.
Particularly with DIY ferts, you have full control from the water column.
Hey @Naturescapes_Rocco good stuff. It is an interesting topic.
The price difference is staggering. And one of the biggest barriers to having more and better aquascapers is resources. I wonder what downsides or challenges we would face doing a more elaborate aquascape with deep areas of substrate and steep slopes. My gut tells me I could make it work but I suspect novice to intermediate skilled scapers would struggle. Anyway great stuff as always!
I've been thinking about this as well since Rocco's Experiment Tank Journal. My questions:
1. For an equal volume of aquasoil vs BDBS , what is the weight comparison. Easy enough to determine. I assume BDBS would be considerably heavier.
2. How well would BDBS be able to maintain a steep slope. We already know it's challenging enough with aquasoil.
3. If building up the slope with another material to lessen the amount of BDBS, what material would be best, lava rock (or some other rock), construction/spray foam, etc.?
4. Would the deeper layer of BDBS result in other challenges to grow healthy plants?
I wouldn't say considerably. Aquasoil is pretty heavy, too. BDBS is likely denser for sure, but it's not double the weight I wouldn't say. I can weigh them dry for comparison to check, though!
It's harder for sure if it's not densely planted. You absolutely can still slope it (I'll have to include a left-side picture of this tank's slope). All my tanks have a general slope, and a few spots with steeper slopes, but it's definitely not as "slope-able" as aquasoil. Possible, but nowhere near as good for that purpose. You'd need small plastic dividers, heavy planting, black superglue to hold it, etc.
3. If building up the slope with another material to lessen the amount of BDBS, what material would be best, lava rock (or some other rock), construction/spray foam, etc.?
I'm not sure. I've had aquasoil 8" deep before without issues. BDBS might compact a bit more than aquasoil, but it's really not like fine sand. It doesn't compact, doesn't turn to mud, and plant roots go to the bottom of the tank's glass! Roots are just as robust and healthy in BDBS as they are in aquasoil, in my experience so far.
If the sand is TOO deep, however, I have no doubt it could eventually cause anaerobic conditions, which is why I did try to stick to 5" max depth if possible.
I saw your post on Reddit. It was crazy the push back and misinformation, but I see in the days since, you've gotten a lot more buy in. I think it was great you were willing to put it out there.
I have a black belt in Brazilian jiu jitsu. I compete a lot (well, used to compete more). On the r/bjj subreddit, I was constantly contradicted by white belts, who were upvoted by other white belts, because the majority of users on r/bjj are white belts.
Same thing happened on r/plantedtank. I remember posting something about how having sunlight on your tank doesn't necessarily cause algae if your CO2 and fertilization are on point, and sunlight in a planted tank is stunning. I got a bunch of comments from people telling me I'm wrong despite my tank, whose picture we were currently looking at, showing the truth of what I said.
I've come to the conclusion that Reddit is a dunning-kruger machine. Posts in a subreddit that most resonate with newbies are more likely to get upvoted, since most of the people enthusiastic enough to actually go to a subreddit are newbies.
Also! It would be a better measure to compare saturated aquasoil vs. saturated BDBS for weight, since you have to consider pore spacing as well as the fact that aquasoil holds water while BDBS does not
I saw your post on Reddit. It was crazy the push back and misinformation, but I see in the days since, you've gotten a lot more buy in. I think it was great you were willing to put it out there.
Also! It would be a better measure to compare saturated aquasoil vs. saturated BDBS for weight, since you have to consider pore spacing as well as the fact that aquasoil holds water while BDBS does not
I've come to the conclusion that Reddit is a dunning-kruger machine. Posts in a subreddit that most resonate with newbies are more likely to get upvoted, since most of the people enthusiastic enough to actually go to a subreddit are newbies.
I agree with both, but I find Reddit to be a bit better in format so its easier to have an exchange. Two days later on FB and I have no idea where a post I was following was. Also, I don't think the newbies are quite as rabid and frothed up as on FB.
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