Disregard my comments. I see you did a large water change. Hope all works out.
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The fish are doing awesome - all have bright red heads, they are schooling together and eating well! Its only the water i'm worried aboutDisregard my comments. I see you did a large water change. Hope all works out.
Yes I feel terrible. I still don’t understand how the filter was processing 3-4 ppm of ammonia with no trace of nitrite in 24 hours. Now feeding the fish sparingly has caused nitrites to rise so high.I am the lone voice here but I do not agree with adding 50 fish of any type in any size aquarium that has just finished cycling. It is always better to start off with a small school at this time in the aquarium's life cycle. When you put that many in at once and then something goes wrong you stand to loose a lot of fish. All aquariums when they have just finished cycling have to age and the beneficial bacteria has to build up in a sufficient amount to take care of the load. Now you are seeing a nitrite spike and that is not good, when you stand to loose so many fish. But others have given you the best advice already in how to handle this spike, but still it is very hard on your fish.
That's possible and likely since you just added the drift wood and this happened unless it is a coincident that ph dropped after adding drift wood. Where did you get your drift wood and what kind is it? I have added lots of drift wood and never had this happen, it as always been beneficial instead of detrimental to my aquarium.I think I may know what the problem is. I added a lot of driftwood to the aquarium 3 days prior to adding the fish. My ph dropped considerably to 6.0. I brought the ph back up to the 7.0 range. I bet that threw my system out of whack