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Discussion Starter · #1 · (Edited)
Hi! Somewhat new to the forum but not to the method. My passion is applying my background in engineering, photography, and design to create Walstads that both function splendidly and look aesthetically pleasing. Here are some of my tanks that are IMHO successfully meeting these objectives. I'd love to see yours.

My 4 gallon office tank:
Plant Green Leaf Botany Grass


Planning out the 4 gallon by laying out the golden rectangle focal points using washi tape:
Plant Rectangle Wood Grass Gas


My 16 gallon cube and 10 gallon long incorporating emersed plants:
Plant Organism Houseplant Terrestrial plant Aquatic plant


My newest tank, the 20 gallon apisto community:
Vertebrate Plant Rectangle Lighting Wood
 

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Discussion Starter · #5 ·
Updates on a couple of my tanks:

I broke down and rescaped the 10 gallon long to include submersed plants with soil substrate. The previous setup had a soil layer encapsulated above, below, and on the sides by Seachem Flourite. While this looked great and worked great for the emersed plants, the fish simply weren’t happy with the lack of vegetative cover. So I converted it to a conventional NPT reusing the same soil and Flourite. I’m keeping the rabbit’s foot fern above the water on a terracotta pot filled with soil, and suspending the other emersed plants using a Poth-o-carry. The betta and minnows seem to enjoy swimming through the plant roots. My plan is to eventually use this as a breeding tank for my CPDs and apistos.

Plant Flowerpot Houseplant Terrestrial plant Rectangle


Meanwhile, the 20 gallon apisto tank just reached its one month birthday. The plants continue to grow incredibly fast. I mixed in compost with the substrate, which I’m assuming is producing a lot of CO2 as it decomposes. Yet ammonia remains 0 and every single fish is happy and active. The larger volume of water and consequent water stability is unlike anything I’ve seen in my smaller tanks. I’m tempted to replace my nano tanks with one large 75 gallon, except a rimless glass tank that size weighs more than I can carry on my own.:(

Plant Plant community Branch Vegetation Terrestrial plant
 

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I’m tempted to replace my nano tanks with one large 75 gallon, except a rimless glass tank that size weighs more than I can carry on my own.:(
I feel your pain. I went through the same calculus when going for my apisto tank. The acrylic tanks are incredibly overpriced and surprisingly fragile as they get bigger. I don't know what I would have done had I not dusted off an old glass tank that had been in my closet for 20 years.
 

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Discussion Starter · #7 ·
I feel your pain. I went through the same calculus when going for my apisto tank. The acrylic tanks are incredibly overpriced and surprisingly fragile as they get bigger. I don't know what I would have done had I not dusted off an old glass tank that had been in my closet for 20 years.
I revisited the beginning of your apisto thread to remind myself what happened to the acrylic tank. That damage photo makes me cringe every time.
 

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Discussion Starter · #8 ·
More detail on the more established tanks: the 4 gallon has been running for over 2 years. It survived me being absent from the office for 4 months while we were on lockdown after a COVID outbreak. I came back to emersed bacopa and an even healthier shrimp colony than when I left. The shrimp population crashed a year later except for a few old timers that are still around. I have a healthy amount of ramshorns and a tiny betta, which I’ll eventually move to a bigger tank. I perform “water changes” once a week by siphoning out a small amount of mulm to water the terrestrial plants, then topping off. The rest of the nitrates are taken care of by the potted monstera whose root traveled 3 feet to find my tank.

Plant Property Houseplant Green Flowerpot


The 16 gallon has been running for about 4 months. This is the first tank where I tried containing the soil in mesh bags. I stuck obstinately to the 0.5-1” rule for sand cap, and plant growth struggled immensely at a constant 2ppm ammonia. I suspect this was due to having excessive hardscape (rocks and wood) in the tank, which displaced the sand cap as they settled. Other, more experienced fish keepers finally convinced me to thicken the sand cap by another inch after WCs and dense planting failed to resolve the issue. Removing the rocks and bigger piece of driftwood took care of the ammonia issue. Plant growth struggled for the first 5 weeks. After that, growth took off. Now I can barely keep up with trimming.

Water Plant Plant community Green Pet supply
 
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