Loved this video. I've only had a 15g and 55g which I recently had to get rid of because I'm moving, but my vids are still on my channel. I'm moving to Houston TX, which where I'm from originally, and the water is hard with a higher ph. I've never had African cichlids but I'm going to start a 250g tank, and not having to worry about plants sounds great, and I could do some really interesting rock and woodwork in a 250g. I'd probably using a fx-6 because I over filter myself. I used 2 seachem tidal 110s on my 55g. My question is, if it were you, which of the African cichlids would put in there, and approximately how many? Do they really do best when they're crowded, because that's what I've heard. Thank you
Nice setup. Beautiful tank. I see a American chiclid in there, a Firemouth. Very cool
Loved this video. I've only had a 15g and 55g which I recently had to get rid of because I'm moving, but my vids are still on my channel. I'm moving to Houston TX, which where I'm from originally, and the water is hard with a higher ph. I've never had African cichlids but I'm going to start a 250g tank, and not having to worry about plants sounds great, and I could do some really interesting rock and woodwork in a 250g. I'd probably using a fx-6 because I over filter myself. I used 2 seachem tidal 110s on my 55g. My question is, if it were you, which of the African cichlids would put in there, and approximately how many? Do they really do best when they're crowded, because that's what I've heard. Thank you
Nice video
Ideally, mbuna tanks should have a lot of rocks. I mean, A LOT of rocks.
All three lakes and riverines in one tank? Lol but hey they look healthy and it looks good