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Hex Waterfall

3K views 26 replies 14 participants last post by  Wy Renegade 
#1 · (Edited)
So I found a great deal at a thrift store on a 30 gallon, hexagon tank and decided to build a new vivarium using some methods I have never used before. Unfortunately I did not take many pictures of the initial build, but have some as the job progressed. I was thinking I might get a new pair of tree frogs for the tank when it was finished. It turned out to be one of the most labor-intensive beta tank ever! Here’s the quick build……

Tank specs:
30 gallon hexagon
50 watt heater
mini fluval water pump, which runs both streams of the waterfall
15 watt plant glo light bulb in stock fixture

Water temp: 68 F
Slight tannin stain in water
4 mm gravel substrate
Soil portion: coco husk, organic potting soil, shredded banana leaves, 5 earthworms
Aquatic plants: anubias lancelota, anubias nana
Terrestrial plants: rabbitsfoot fern, ivy, palm fern, and various local mosses

The main terrestrial feature is the waterfall made from egg crate material and Great Stuff spray foam. This is an excellent method used by many in the other herp forums. Worked great and I was able to get the basic structure built so that I could access the inside of the waterfall for any maintenance issues that may arise. I also planned ahead fro some small planters to be housed within the waterfall as well. Once the spray foam dried (24 hrs) I carved the waterfall to look like rocks and left a nice deep channel for the water to cascade downward. I cut slots out and laboriously foamed in a few real slate rocks for the water to run off as it traveled down the waterfall. Since the tank was to be seen from only one basic angle, I decided to cover the side walls with a faux rock background as well. I sprayed the walls with the GS and then carved them as well.
 
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#2 · (Edited)
When the rocks looked right, I made a mixture of concrete and colored it with concrete dye. The charcoal worked well and I painted 3 layers of quikcrete onto the waterfall and rock walls. After they all dried, I used acrylic paint to add highlights and tint the rocks the exact color I wanted. I had never used the concrete method before and it worked well. The rocks were very real looking.

Then I built an egg crate stand that would keep the waterfall and planted area above the waterline. The waterfall rested nicely on this stand and then I spray foamed the two pieces together in the tank. I carved the foam once again and then put concrete on to lock the two pieces together forever.

I covered the egg crate with window screen below the waterline and then spread a layer of silicone onto the screen. It took some tender loving care, but I was able to press rocks into the silicone and it held really quite nicely.
 
#3 · (Edited)
The finishing touches were also new to me so I tried several methods for bringing in some coco fiber, moss, and bark materials to the jungle waterfall theme. I used silicone around the waterline and lightly pressed moss into it. It worked only moderately well. I also tried the gorilla glue method which held up very nicely for moss and bark. Hands down the best method for using coco bark was the titebond III method. Mixing the titebond and the bark made a great paste for the walls and on rocks to give them that realistic look. The glue dried clear and hard as a “rock”. Held up for almost a year now.
 
#4 · (Edited)
The tank has gone thru a few face-lifts but since I didn’t have the right fauna for it, I just left it as a rain chamber in my classroom. I can close the tank down tight after school and then put a few of those cold packs on the glass top in the morning and it will make clouds, and then rain like the dickens in there for about an hour! Two weeks ago, a student brought in a beautiful male beta that needed a home. So here is the tank today. I think it needs some work and a new face lift…any suggestions??

As always, thanks for all the help and advice…….Best Fishes
 
#9 ·
It looks fantastic the way it is but why not flood the whole thing? My betta spends all day hunting snails and micro fauna, shimmying through the plants etc so he's really interesting to watch. I think you are missing out by not giving yours the space to explore and stretch his fins.
 
#10 ·
thanks everyone, i really appreciate it. I dont know that I want to flood it just yet. I have a fair amount of soil in the tank and dont want the mess. I lost a bunch of plants and need to replant for sure. I love the jungle look.

What about some emergent growth like a riparium plant or two. Does anyone know of a small leafed plant that would work here? Hydrophyte would know I'm sure.................

Heres a major problem (i thkn). I have no filtration in the tank and have to do major water changes every week. I dont have much room to work with in the beta section, plus my fear would be that it would blow him outta there. I can get a filter back behind the falls but it doesnt seem to do much since the water is kind of separated. any sugesstions???
 
#16 ·
I come up a few times a year for supplies, Logan just got me some fish. I am in need for some plants for this 75 riverscape...........let me know if you folks wanna swap some gear. I have hardware and plenty of trade gear!

keep me posted....love your tanks!

JD
 
#25 ·
james and discus man: tanks a bunch. I worked really hard on the scape but the last few pics show the loss of plants......jsut havent gotten around to fixin it up. The plans are in the mix for a rebuild on this baby. I'll keep yall posted

thanks again
 
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