Set up my tank on Xmas - Gift for my three year old
20 gallon long
Rinsed the gravel
Marineland Bio-wheel 150
Air stone
Filled with water and treated with start right Start-right
After some initial kills, was running with two julli cory catfish and two tetras
Tank was pretty stable at this point
Added a couple Java Ferns
Still good. Testing with strips. Things look OK
Three weeks pass and we end up at pet smart....
Got a little crazy. Added 12 fish and two more plants. Changed filter media.
Nitrite levels shoot up and fish start dying. Surprise, surprise
Start doing 75% water changes twice a day. Fish stop dying.
Got API master test kit. Nitrite levels are not good.
After a 75% change, I am seeing
PH 7.4
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 0-.25
Nitrate 0
Prior to the change, when changing twice a day
PH 7.8
Ammonia 0
Nitrite .50
Nitrates somewhere between 0 and 5.0
Prior to the change, when I miss a water change
PH 7.8
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 1.0
Nitrates somewhere between 0 and 5.0
temp 78 - I adjust the temp of the water I put in to match so as to avoid sudden temp changes.
I am adding Start-Right and aquarium salt to the water I add as well.
Have since added second Marineland Bio-wheel 150 and two more java ferns. I added the second filter because I had a failure with the first. Disassembly and reassembly resolved the issue, but I can't risk a failure while no one is home. I also read here somewhere that more circulation is better. Overkill, I'm sure, but what the heck...
Came home one day and there was an Angel fish from nana for my daughter.
Fish seem to be doing OK. Been a week since the last kill.
Surviviors:
(2) Julli Cory catfish
(2) Tetras
(1) tetra neon (3 died since my blunder)
(4) Mickeys
(2) Guppies (2 died since my blunder)
(1) Angel Fish
These water changes are killing me. If I don't get up early enough to do it before work, I spend 15 minutes of my lunch hour doing it.
How long until the Nitrites drop and Nitrates take off?
Anything I can do that will speed it along without risk to the fish?
I read that vacuuming the gravel is not always the best idea when you are trying to establish a cycle???
Should I continue to abstain from vacuuming?
I have also read people discouraging the use of charcoal. My filter media packs contain charcoal. The manufacturer recommends changing them every two to four weeks. Until the cycle is established, should I not change the media? Since I want to maintain bacteria, I would only change one filter at a time. The bio-wheel 150 has two filter slots, so I can insert a new one and leave the old one in for a while to let the bacteria migrate.
What are your thoughts on charcoal?
Am I off track about the filter media ?
Is the aquarium salt helping me?
I really don't have any trusted sources for gravel or filter media from an established tank.
Thanx in advance.
20 gallon long
Rinsed the gravel
Marineland Bio-wheel 150
Air stone
Filled with water and treated with start right Start-right
After some initial kills, was running with two julli cory catfish and two tetras
Tank was pretty stable at this point
Added a couple Java Ferns
Still good. Testing with strips. Things look OK
Three weeks pass and we end up at pet smart....
Got a little crazy. Added 12 fish and two more plants. Changed filter media.
Nitrite levels shoot up and fish start dying. Surprise, surprise
Start doing 75% water changes twice a day. Fish stop dying.
Got API master test kit. Nitrite levels are not good.
After a 75% change, I am seeing
PH 7.4
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 0-.25
Nitrate 0
Prior to the change, when changing twice a day
PH 7.8
Ammonia 0
Nitrite .50
Nitrates somewhere between 0 and 5.0
Prior to the change, when I miss a water change
PH 7.8
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 1.0
Nitrates somewhere between 0 and 5.0
temp 78 - I adjust the temp of the water I put in to match so as to avoid sudden temp changes.
I am adding Start-Right and aquarium salt to the water I add as well.
Have since added second Marineland Bio-wheel 150 and two more java ferns. I added the second filter because I had a failure with the first. Disassembly and reassembly resolved the issue, but I can't risk a failure while no one is home. I also read here somewhere that more circulation is better. Overkill, I'm sure, but what the heck...
Came home one day and there was an Angel fish from nana for my daughter.
Fish seem to be doing OK. Been a week since the last kill.
Surviviors:
(2) Julli Cory catfish
(2) Tetras
(1) tetra neon (3 died since my blunder)
(4) Mickeys
(2) Guppies (2 died since my blunder)
(1) Angel Fish
These water changes are killing me. If I don't get up early enough to do it before work, I spend 15 minutes of my lunch hour doing it.
How long until the Nitrites drop and Nitrates take off?
Anything I can do that will speed it along without risk to the fish?
I read that vacuuming the gravel is not always the best idea when you are trying to establish a cycle???
Should I continue to abstain from vacuuming?
I have also read people discouraging the use of charcoal. My filter media packs contain charcoal. The manufacturer recommends changing them every two to four weeks. Until the cycle is established, should I not change the media? Since I want to maintain bacteria, I would only change one filter at a time. The bio-wheel 150 has two filter slots, so I can insert a new one and leave the old one in for a while to let the bacteria migrate.
What are your thoughts on charcoal?
Am I off track about the filter media ?
Is the aquarium salt helping me?
I really don't have any trusted sources for gravel or filter media from an established tank.
Thanx in advance.