I've got those Sand-Substrate Cloudy-Water Blues

Wycco

Eat more pine trees
Apr 19, 2009
1,882
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34^N 81^W
Real Name
Kim Jong Il
So waking up on day 4 of my sand-substrate new 55g being cycled.

I never used sand as a kid/teen when fishkeeping so this is new to me.

Started with some play sand from home depot... Put it in a big bucket- rinsed it 4 or 5 times- poured off the debris... Obviously not NEARLY enough rinsing. There are still a lot of small sand particles in the water.

Googling and researching extensively I've heard people claim sand should settle in as little as two hours to one guy who it took 10 days and multiple water changes... YIKES!

It is slowly getting clearer- but I've not noticed much improvement last 12 hours. I can see to the back of the tank- and am begginning to see the details on the slate caves I made at the back of the tank.

My main concern is the lack of light reaching my plants whilst the water remains cloudy. My Amazon Sword looked quite poorly when I got it from Petsmart... hoped with with some fert tablets and some light I could nurse it back to health... I think it's looking a little more transparant now than when I got it.

I know plants need "day and night" but should I perhaps leave the light on 24/7 whilst the water remains cloudy to help them out?

I've heard conflicting comments on changing water whilst cycling- whereas most people seem to suggest the bacteria doesn't live on the water- but rather on the objects, substrate and walls of the tank- I've read lots of people claim that changing water during the cycle will, none-the-less slow down the cycling.

Perhaps bacteria has a "less-loose" grip early on and get's water bound easy during a water change? I dunno... I know nothing! ;)

I've got more plants in the mail- hopefully will help my cycle along- and it sure would be easier to plant them with the water level down. I expect the plants will arrive friday.


I have heard that once bacteria is present on the sand that it clears up much quicker- and settles much quicker when disturbed. This is good to hear.


For me, for now, I suspect I'm paying the price for not washing my sand thoroughly enough. I thought I was gentle pouring the water in (over the slate- thought that would do the same as a plate)... maybe not gentle enough. I daresay I have a number of massive water changes and a number of cloudy days ahead of me still.


Any advice?


I do- WASH YOUR SAND VERY WELL... AN HOUR WASHING SAND WILL PROBABLY SAVE YOU TIME IN THE LONG RUN!

I guess the type of sand I choose, playsand, being super fine makes things worse for me too!




Oh, and one more thing- another thing I've read mixed opinions on is running my filter. I've read people say it's OK- the silt is so fine it won't hurt anything and I've read people say it will kill the filter. What's the expert opinions here?

I want bacteria in my filter media- so I've been running it on and off. 4 hours on- 4 hours off... and off at night.
 
Mine didnt settle for almost 2 weeks, but I use a ultra fine sand and not playsand or chunky sands.

What is the tank's filter, I knw its a 55 but what filter is on it?

I had 3 penguin 150's( 26g tank yeah I know under filtered) within 3 weeks of eachother, two went out within hours of eachother, the sand particles in the water even after a dozen rinses were still getting into the filter, changed HOT filter for a different companies unit and the cloudy went away and hasnt returned, even when I stir the sand by hand it never clouds and what "smokescreens" I do cause settle within 30 seconds to a minute.
 
The bacteria live on stuff. They feed on the ammonia/nitrites in the water. Doing water changes lowers these levels, making bacteria reproduce less quickly. I would empty the tank, refill it (via a slow stream from a syphon in the bucket), and repeat. The only way you will get it completely clear, without many, many water changes, is to put a polishing filter on it. If you have a canister, you can get polishing sponges for it. This, combined with the water changes, should clear it up in a few days.
 
It was an aquarium kit- came with a hang on the back filter.

Even though- it's meant for a tank my size (came with the aquarium). I've got a sponge filter coming in the mail too- figured you can't over filter- (and going to use an air pump on it and an airstone. Quite disgusted the "all you need" kit didn't come with an air pump... I would have thought it important...

If I ever need a quarantine tank- I'll have the sponge filter ready to use (and with good bacteria already on it).

I know the bacteria feed on the stuff in the water- but right now all the water has in it is Ammonia- I can always add more of that!!!!

2 Weeks to clear? WOW! Good to know once it settles I'm passed this nightmare!
 
If you don't want to wait for it to clear, then you can buy a bottle water clarifier sold at the local chain stores designed to clear a cloudy tank. It contains chemicals that bind to tiny solutes and precipitate them out of the water.
 
If you don't want to wait for it to clear, then you can buy a bottle water clarifier sold at the local chain stores designed to clear a cloudy tank. It contains chemicals that bind to tiny solutes and precipitate them out of the water.


Ah thank you! Fantastic! So that works with silt in sand too then? Do you have a recommended brand? How much are they?

Certainly would alleviate some of my worries about damage to filters and the light being blocked to my plants. If it wern't for those too issues I wouldn't be too worried. Can't stock the tank until I'm cycled- so cloudy water isn't ruining my view! ;)
 
I have a tetra 45 XL HOT filter, it doesnt suck up the sand( which is what that one is doing) and push it back thru the water.


Dont get the drops. why? they dont always work, and you also might be having a bloom in the tank so dont add anything. I add nothing to my water but CYCLE.

Ive also taken fish from one tank to another temp house( half ayear for renovations) with only CYCLE and the fish are still alive, and that was 2 new unestablished tanks ago.

I have the crystal clear, its not worth it IMO.


http://www.hagen.com/usa/aquatic/product.cfm?CAT=1&SUBCAT=121&PROD_ID=01076120020101
 
you said it yourself you didnt wash the sand enough... i recently redid my 75 100 lbs of new playsand took a solid hour and 5 buckets to clean it but i put it in the tank and was clear in less than 10 min
 
I used sand once and hated it. This is just one of the reasons why. It took a couple of days to clear up (I was running the filter 24/7 at the time) and I had to change the filter cartridge afterwards. Then I found it impossible to keep clean. Detritus on top of the sand was clearly visible and I couldn't find a happy medium to run the vacuum to suck it off. Run it too far from the sand and nothing happens. Too close and you suck up sand with the detritus. Actually, the sand seemed lighter than the detritus so you sucked up more of it. I gave up on sand after about 6 months.
 
^^^^ Super fine fishnet, or an old fishnet handle and pantyhose, I just figured it out, my netting is too big for the small ones but it took all the big stuff off the top and the cats are working on the other debris as we speak.

I just did a 6 gallon change on my 26g and I regret to inform you its still settling, I really kicked up the sand though.
 
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