This has been going on for about 6 weeks.
This is my first freshwater tank, it was a Christmas gift and I planned to put it in my son's room by the time he arrived (mid-April). It looks like he may come before the tank is ready at this point.
First the background - It is a 20 gal tank with two medium-sized plants (which are doing very well it seems). Our tap water is very hard, around 8.0 Ph. I have about a 75/25 mix of tap and RO water courtesy of Wal-Mart that stabilizes at around 7.6 - 7.8. Temp is stead at 76 F.
I am using ammonia (10% concentrate) found at the local ACE Hardware. I dispense it from an eyedropper bottle. I'm not sure how the drops translate into ml. I added 15-20 drops to get to 4 ppm, then backed it down to 10 drops as a "maintenance" dose in the morning, and then I would test in the afternoon.
Initially, the cycle seemed fine, my ammonia had dropped to 0, nitrites were high, but I had steady, if gradual, rise in nitirites, topping out around 5 ppm.
I expected to see the nitrites drop off and then I'd be ready, but then the horror struck the last week in February.
First the nitrites flatlined, then, a day or two later, I had a few algae spots on the tank (brown/green, around the size of a dime). I scrubbed them off and then the pH crashed, down to 6.6 in a matter of days.
Ammonia processing seemed to slow down, so I did a massive water change, maybe 60-70% which has restored the pH to around 8.2 or so. Dechlorinated the water before adding it.
As the aqarium needs to be topped off with a gallon of water ever 10-14 days, due to evaporation loss, I plan to do this with RO water. This will step down the pH gradually as time goes on.
Today, the pH is 8.2, I put 10 drops of ammonia in the morning, but by testing 12-14 hours later, ammonia levels are zero. Nitrates are through the roof (80 + ppm). No sign of any nitrates. Also no recurrence of the alage (so far).
My essential questions are:
1. Why the pH crash earlier, did this (or in combination with the alage) kill of the nitrites?
(I suspect this is related to the use of the RO water, which begs the questions: (a) is it even necessary to tamp down the baseline pH of 8.0+; (b) if so, is there a better way to go about it; (c) is there a way to use the RO to tamp down the baseline pH w/o it causing this massive crash?)
2. Any ideas on what I'm doing wrong?
3. Anything else I should be doing?
Thanks in advance.
This is my first freshwater tank, it was a Christmas gift and I planned to put it in my son's room by the time he arrived (mid-April). It looks like he may come before the tank is ready at this point.
First the background - It is a 20 gal tank with two medium-sized plants (which are doing very well it seems). Our tap water is very hard, around 8.0 Ph. I have about a 75/25 mix of tap and RO water courtesy of Wal-Mart that stabilizes at around 7.6 - 7.8. Temp is stead at 76 F.
I am using ammonia (10% concentrate) found at the local ACE Hardware. I dispense it from an eyedropper bottle. I'm not sure how the drops translate into ml. I added 15-20 drops to get to 4 ppm, then backed it down to 10 drops as a "maintenance" dose in the morning, and then I would test in the afternoon.
Initially, the cycle seemed fine, my ammonia had dropped to 0, nitrites were high, but I had steady, if gradual, rise in nitirites, topping out around 5 ppm.
I expected to see the nitrites drop off and then I'd be ready, but then the horror struck the last week in February.
First the nitrites flatlined, then, a day or two later, I had a few algae spots on the tank (brown/green, around the size of a dime). I scrubbed them off and then the pH crashed, down to 6.6 in a matter of days.
Ammonia processing seemed to slow down, so I did a massive water change, maybe 60-70% which has restored the pH to around 8.2 or so. Dechlorinated the water before adding it.
As the aqarium needs to be topped off with a gallon of water ever 10-14 days, due to evaporation loss, I plan to do this with RO water. This will step down the pH gradually as time goes on.
Today, the pH is 8.2, I put 10 drops of ammonia in the morning, but by testing 12-14 hours later, ammonia levels are zero. Nitrates are through the roof (80 + ppm). No sign of any nitrates. Also no recurrence of the alage (so far).
My essential questions are:
1. Why the pH crash earlier, did this (or in combination with the alage) kill of the nitrites?
(I suspect this is related to the use of the RO water, which begs the questions: (a) is it even necessary to tamp down the baseline pH of 8.0+; (b) if so, is there a better way to go about it; (c) is there a way to use the RO to tamp down the baseline pH w/o it causing this massive crash?)
2. Any ideas on what I'm doing wrong?
3. Anything else I should be doing?
Thanks in advance.