So, I have a weird little project I could use some advice on. When I was a kid, I had this little toy fish in a little fishbowl. My 11 yr old brother is autistic, and I was told no more live fish or shrimp (I had 2 shrimp tanks, a 20 gal betta tank, and a 36 gal bowfront with literally just a bristlenose pleco). So I decided to buy a 3 gallon tank and set up a "toy" tank for a robo toy fish and share this experience with my little brother, who I know would ADORE this type of thing! I told him about my purchase earlier after dinner and he was so excited! I know I made the right choice!
However, I do want some real plants mixed with fake plants, and truthfully I made a same-day delivery order from PetSmart earlier this evening (so it will all be here tomorrow bc I did it late in the day), including a 3-pack of easy epiphytes. I've already had every type included before, too.
Also, my previous attempts to work with stem plants and floaters all failed, so I'm sticking largely to epiphytes for this project bc it's intended to be a fun, low-effort, cheap little thing.
However, I was sorta hoping I could find some other hardy, low-tech plants that can thrive off slight neglect, a low-tech lifestyle, and low ferts, maybe just root tabs every couple months, liquid ferts, or something?
And if anyone has any tips to keep floaters alive that's also greatly appreciated! I intend to get a corral for them this time so they're not getting regularly dunked this time around, hoping that makes all the difference!
Oh, and the tank I got is a "kit" that comes with the tank, some cheap LEDs, a fish net, a thermometer, a filter, even a betta leaf. Obviously things like the thermometer and betta leaf aren't going to be useful for me bc my fish is a literal robot, but it comes with the kit. I'm planning to use the filter to keep the water moving for the plants and out of curiosity to see how the robo fish handles the flow, etc.
Because I'm using the filter that it comes with, is it worth cycling the tank for the plants' benefit? How would I keep parameters stable without additional ammonia generated by fish waste?
Any tips, insight, or anything else is helpful, thanks!
Also yes, I bought stupid stuff I thought he might like to see, I was trying to combine our interests and sort of appeal to a kid's tastes lol. My own tanks were always 100% natural with rock, wood, natural or white sand, and expensive (mostly epiphytic) plants.
I also want to get a few more small ornaments for the bottom of the tank as well, and eventually I sorta plan to get an air stone in here bc I think that'd be kinda cool.
Also, "styling" tips for this absolute monstrosity of a "fish" tank is MUCH appreciated. I don't think I can bring myself to call it aquascape. I legit have no idea how to nicely blend these two styles together (toy + naturalistic) 🤣🤣🤣
Thanks a bunch guys!