echoofformless
Peat Advocate & Defender Of Snails
I'm inviting flames for saying this:
Water changes don't need to be performed as often as people think. And nor does tank size determine the necessity of their frequency.
It really comes down to stocking, filtration types, whether planted or not, what sort of plants, etc etc etc etc so forth and so on, ad nauseum.
Now while I confess to being the laziest fish keeper ever, who would rather not be so lazy and wishes he really did those wonderfully effective weekly water changes, this laziness has also reaped the benefit of learning. Certain tanks of mine I have learned can go as much as months without water changes, whereas others need weekly ones or they start showing ill effects.
Anyway, back on topic I wish you the best with your tank and now you know to be gentle with it. Basically the idea is that there is some "dirt" that is necessary and good.
Try working some live plants into the mix. Botanical filtration is the most underrated of all beneficial additions to an aquarium. In fact I almost find it offensive that they always talk about the "three" forms of filtration - mechanical, chemical and biological without having even introduced the wonders of that fourth kind...
Water changes don't need to be performed as often as people think. And nor does tank size determine the necessity of their frequency.
It really comes down to stocking, filtration types, whether planted or not, what sort of plants, etc etc etc etc so forth and so on, ad nauseum.
Now while I confess to being the laziest fish keeper ever, who would rather not be so lazy and wishes he really did those wonderfully effective weekly water changes, this laziness has also reaped the benefit of learning. Certain tanks of mine I have learned can go as much as months without water changes, whereas others need weekly ones or they start showing ill effects.
Anyway, back on topic I wish you the best with your tank and now you know to be gentle with it. Basically the idea is that there is some "dirt" that is necessary and good.
Try working some live plants into the mix. Botanical filtration is the most underrated of all beneficial additions to an aquarium. In fact I almost find it offensive that they always talk about the "three" forms of filtration - mechanical, chemical and biological without having even introduced the wonders of that fourth kind...