Autonerd
Fish Fanatic
- Joined
- Dec 22, 2011
- Messages
- 67
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Soooo, after getting advice here and doing more research, I decided maybe killing off danios wasn't the way I wanted to get into this hobby.
Took the danios to the closest independent LFS to see if I could find them a new home while I found some ammonia and did a fishless cycle.
LFS said she could take the fish, but recommended using Nutrafin Cycle and cycling with the fish in, said they'd withstand the ammonia spike and I should *not* change water until cycle was through. Even though this conflicts most of what I'd read, I bought the bottle for ten bucks. (I know. I know.)
Came home, checked temp, re-acclimated fish to tank water, added bacteria in a bottle per listed dose, and then re-added fish.
An hour later, danio #2 was lying on the bottom. (For those just joining our story, danio #1 died yesterday.) Don't know if it was the chemicals, the ammonia, or the stress of the car ride. (These are now the most-traveled fish in the San Fernando Valley.)
So now I have one big, lonely danio; one tank full of unknowns; and not much clue as to what to do next.
I'd like to try to continue cycling with the fish in there, as I'm now not real eager to return him to the indie LFS. Keep up cycling as I was, and if he dies, I'll move to fish-less cycling. But I'm not sure if one fish (and a few plants) is enough to get the cycle moving, and I don't want to torture a schooling fish by being alone. But I also don't want to add more danios.
Opinions? Advice?
Lost in America,
Aaron
Took the danios to the closest independent LFS to see if I could find them a new home while I found some ammonia and did a fishless cycle.
LFS said she could take the fish, but recommended using Nutrafin Cycle and cycling with the fish in, said they'd withstand the ammonia spike and I should *not* change water until cycle was through. Even though this conflicts most of what I'd read, I bought the bottle for ten bucks. (I know. I know.)
Came home, checked temp, re-acclimated fish to tank water, added bacteria in a bottle per listed dose, and then re-added fish.
An hour later, danio #2 was lying on the bottom. (For those just joining our story, danio #1 died yesterday.) Don't know if it was the chemicals, the ammonia, or the stress of the car ride. (These are now the most-traveled fish in the San Fernando Valley.)
So now I have one big, lonely danio; one tank full of unknowns; and not much clue as to what to do next.
I'd like to try to continue cycling with the fish in there, as I'm now not real eager to return him to the indie LFS. Keep up cycling as I was, and if he dies, I'll move to fish-less cycling. But I'm not sure if one fish (and a few plants) is enough to get the cycle moving, and I don't want to torture a schooling fish by being alone. But I also don't want to add more danios.
Opinions? Advice?
Lost in America,
Aaron