Hi everyone,
I've been cycling a 55 gallon tank, using the fishless cycling method with pure ammonia. It's been approximately 4 weeks since I started.
I dosed the tank to get the ammonia level at 5ppm and waited, (and waited and waited...) until it began to drop. When it reached 1ppm I tested the Nitrites and they were off the chart. I redosed the ammonia to bring it to 3ppm and continue feeding the established bacteria.
The nitrate remained off the charts for 2 weeks. When I started to see a slight decline in Nitrites I tested the Nitrates and got a reading of about 20ppm. This went on for a week.
Yesterday I tested the Nitrites and they were at 2ppm (approx) but the Nitrates had spike to off the chart levels. We went to our local family owned fish store and NiteOut II was recommended to speed up the process. I added the NiteOut II last night according to the directs and this morning I have ammonia at 0ppm, Nitrite at 0ppm and Nitrates off the charts.
Is it possible that the NiteOut assisted the cycle so quickly or do you think it's more likely that the tank was already at the final stages of the cycle?
I'm going to do a 75% water change today. Dose the ammonia back to 3ppm and check Ammonia, Nitrite and Nitrate tomorrow. Am I correct in thinking that the readings should be Ammonia - 0ppm, Nitrite - 0ppm and Nitrate >20ppm in 12 hours?
I'm using an eheim pro II canister filter without a carbon pad. Should I add the carbon insert after the 75% water change to be sure there are no chemicals that could harm my Blood Parrots?
Thanks for any help you can offer.
Christy
I've been cycling a 55 gallon tank, using the fishless cycling method with pure ammonia. It's been approximately 4 weeks since I started.
I dosed the tank to get the ammonia level at 5ppm and waited, (and waited and waited...) until it began to drop. When it reached 1ppm I tested the Nitrites and they were off the chart. I redosed the ammonia to bring it to 3ppm and continue feeding the established bacteria.
The nitrate remained off the charts for 2 weeks. When I started to see a slight decline in Nitrites I tested the Nitrates and got a reading of about 20ppm. This went on for a week.
Yesterday I tested the Nitrites and they were at 2ppm (approx) but the Nitrates had spike to off the chart levels. We went to our local family owned fish store and NiteOut II was recommended to speed up the process. I added the NiteOut II last night according to the directs and this morning I have ammonia at 0ppm, Nitrite at 0ppm and Nitrates off the charts.
Is it possible that the NiteOut assisted the cycle so quickly or do you think it's more likely that the tank was already at the final stages of the cycle?
I'm going to do a 75% water change today. Dose the ammonia back to 3ppm and check Ammonia, Nitrite and Nitrate tomorrow. Am I correct in thinking that the readings should be Ammonia - 0ppm, Nitrite - 0ppm and Nitrate >20ppm in 12 hours?
I'm using an eheim pro II canister filter without a carbon pad. Should I add the carbon insert after the 75% water change to be sure there are no chemicals that could harm my Blood Parrots?
Thanks for any help you can offer.
Christy