Can't imagine how the electricity bill (of all things) becomes the primary focus when looking at these beautiful aquascapes. More important to me is the desire to visit and admire them firsthand. Thanks for posting.
This is a good video to aprecciate and help the newbies to learn how to position the plants and the subtrate in the aqua for a better looking effect...
This was actually the living room in Takashi Amano's home in Japan. His home was not far from the fukushima nuclear reactor accident. Takashi passed away on August 4Th 2015 from cancer. I wonder if he contracted cancer as the result of the Fukushima nuclear fall out? He was an extremely talented man whose gifts to the aquarium hobby are unparalleled. May he rest in peace..
those freshwater aquarium are awesome, i think im gonna do a vivarium similiar with those but with shrimps, african frogs and some bettas, with a plataform PS: freshwater aquarium to me are fun than marine ones
Wonderful, there are a few people who care to planets in their aqua, maybe they dont khow that plants can make their eco 10 times more beautiful !! wish it was in motion picture so we coulde see live fishes motion better. Supreme Harmony, congrats ! واندرفول بود آقا
@biowerks true it takes a lot of work to keep al those tanks healthy and clean. But most of those tanks are small parts of nature and are balanced. This means that the tanks keep themselves clean. This because of the organisms and bacteries that clean up poo etc.
@ShutlOrbit I should think that a lover and admirer of nature would exhibit at least some desire either to conserve energy or to run his aquascapes on renewable energy, no? I'm sure these tanks don't require all that much power though, just filtration and grow lights.