I would do a 30 to 50 percent change. The main thing is that you want the ammonia to be measurable so you can see as it begins to drop. you may end up haviing to add a little back but at leat you will know the reading.
Continue to add ammonia daily as you must feed the bacteria that have formed or they will begin to die off.
I think you will be fine just adding ammonia every 24 hours. I have been experimenting with another method and only adding once a day. it has gone fine so far. The bacteria die-off in 10 to 12 hours without ammonia will be very minimal so once a day should be fine.Continue to add ammonia daily as you must feed the bacteria that have formed or they will begin to die off.
can i just confirm this part (at this stage at the moment)...
when adding the ammonia it's gone in < 12 hours - do i only add 4ppm once every 24 hours, or carry on adding ammonia whenever it reaches 0ppm (hence about twice every 24 hours)?
thanks for the great thread
Personally, I don't like the add daily method as it takes way too long. The add and wait method will still give you plenty of bacteria for a heavy stock. There is no way that even a double stock of fish will produce 4 to 5 ppm of ammonia in 10 to 12 hours unless they are extremely messy fish and I'm not even sure if that is possible. If you do use the add daily method, you will most likely have to do nearly a 100% water change. Just the add and wait method will put your nitrates easily in the 200 ppm range which would still leave you with 100 ppm after a 50% change.I have a 29 gallon tank and set it up 2 days ago. I started adding ammonia today it took me 24 drops to get the ammonia level up to 6ppm. I am going to have heavy stock of fish to put in there. I am going to use the "add daily" method am I not correct? I am going to use the same amount of ammonia everyday til it goes drops to 0 then cut the amount in half and test for nitrates and nitrites. I am usin ornaments and a plant from my other tank to establish a seed. After everything reaches 0 I am going to do a 50% water change. Am I doing this correctly?
I have read with great interest all the issues over the last few months covered in this section of the forum. Im very new to the hobby and id like to share with you my experiences to date....
I set up a 70 gal tank (377 litre) about a month ago, put a large bag of plant fertalizer pellets in first then topped off with sand bought from my local aquarium shop. (Maidenhead aquatics in Havant). I filled out with various fast growing plants and topped up with tap water from my hose pipe. I added the Chlorine/Chloride neutralizer together with some liquid culture to speed up the cycling process. Sadly I didnt fully read or understand the Cycling process and after a week when the tank water reached the right temp (78) and looked nice and clear I hastily added 2 Platys. A week later and 25 fry appeared, naturally I assumed everything was going well so I went out and bought 20 more fish!!! All seemed to be ok until my Cardinals started to die, a couple of Guppys suffered the same fate and after losing a swordtail I took a water sample to my dealer. All looked ok so I just put it down to bad luck. During week 3 a Cardinal had a cotton-wool like fluff growing over it (Mold) and later died. White spot appeared on several other fish - so after buying the necessary treatments and turning my tank a wicked Green colour I was hoping to resolve the sickness that had ravished most of my remaining fish. The 3 day treatment over I decided to buy a test kit...!!! No Amonia at all but a massive spike in Nitrite and Nitrate - I had been doing regular weekly 10per cent water changes but I upped this to twice weekly in an attempt to spare the remaining fish any further distress. I have tested every 2 days during the following week (now into week 4) and im getting the same high spike in N02 and N03. (Tap water showing no signs of either). 2 days ago I did a 25 percent water change and have just tested again but result is the same.
Conclusion - Using fish to cycle the tank can in my experience be cruel and I'm feeling pretty foolish for not waiting.
Question - Am I doing anything wrong now or is it a case of simply waiting it out for the Nitrite to drop away?
Ps - My remaining Guppys and Mollies have given birth and I now have approx 70 fry in a separate floating net...!
at least something is going right..!
test for nitrites. Once the nitrite drops back to zero, do your big water change and add your fish.
No need. The large water change is required if you have done a fishless cycle as the nitrate will be off the scale.
As you done a fish-in cycle, and your nitrate level is ok because you have been performing many water changes, the big water change at the end is not necessary.
Cheers.
Do the decorations NEED to be in the tank during cycling, or does it really matter? Would it take longer if you put in a new thing every week or so? Or is it recommended to buy everything first and then get it all set up before cycling so that the bacteria can get on everything?