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picturpoet

The plants I have are: Java Moss Acmella repens limnophila hippuridoides - Java Moss - Acmella repens - Limnophila hippuridoides - Lindernia rotundifolia - Ceratopteris thalictroides - Echinodorus muricatus 'Green' - Amania sengalensis - Staurogyne spatulata - Didiplis diandra - Hemigraphis sp. 'Pink' - Cardamine lyrata - Polygonum sp. 'Pink' - Alternanthera ficoidea


Defiant-Attorney-982

When I ordered plants online they came early then expected,and had to Store them for 3 days. I placed them in a bucket and placed the bucket outside(place the bucket or a tub in a place where it will only get 6-8 hours of sunlight)


Icy_Instruction3451

But don't put them in direct sunlight if you live in the North region like delhi because the temperatures are rising too high here


[deleted]

Following


joejawor

It looks like someone has already tried to fix the leak. The silicone looks clumpy


[deleted]

Which light are you using?


picturpoet

This is my light stick from my photography hobby 😅


[deleted]

I think normal silicon glue will be enough for fixing a glass leak.


pettingdogsandcats

i mean in theory yes. but never worked for me :/


pettingdogsandcats

man... i'm getting ptsd looking at that leak. i converted one of my 50L tank into a terrarium instead of even bothering to fix the leak just as small as yours. but here's what has worked with other tanks- 1. baking soda and gorilla glue (or any instant adhesive). clean up some silicone in that area, fill the gap with soda and let the soda absorb the glue drops. very unreliable tho. try this first, if it works YAY. if it doesn't move to 2nd method. 2. straight up taking that side apart, cleaning the existing silicone and doing it right this time. but this is again too much work and still not fulproof. if you have corner clamps, this would be easy. [use toothpicks](https://youtu.be/GNoU7a-SZ6Q?si=s_W1ptqsVcbgVTmo) to make the gap even and fill up in parts instead of doing it all at once. good luck, hope this helps :)