If you allow things to regress to where nitrate rises, from within the tank itself, and then do catch-up so the nitrate lowers, that is not good tank husbandry.
No where did I say “allow things to regress”. What I said was do water changes with the frequency and volume to maintain consistent levels your particular species thrives in. I then offered my personal starting point for filter maintence, and said watch your tank and test and then increase your maintence as needed. Only a psychic would know before hand the exact perfect schedule, I rely on tests and observations, ymmv. Btw, if you’re not testing your water as you claim, how do you know when a problem is starting or your maintence schedule needs adjusting? IME over decades of keeping fish myself, I’ve found testing the 4 basic levels regularly clues me into an issue long before watching my fish does.
Water changes should be regular and significant. There is no benefit to reducing the volume or frequency if you think they may not be needed at the higher levels. This seems to be one of your contentions. Same goes for filter cleaning. The more water changed, and the more the filter is rinsed, the healthier will be the fish.
Again, go back and read what I wrote and then quote where I said REDUCE anything! Although I will tell you, if you only do 60% a week, you’re significantly affecting your water chemistry, and some sensitive species can be be adversely affected by this up to death. That’s why people who are consistently successful with sensitive fish do smaller volume changes several times a week, and many private and most professional aquariums install a drip system to automatically change small amounts every day.
Also, how does doing water changes rinse out your filter? I shut my filter off during water changes, but whether you keep it on or not taking water out of your tank and then replacing it does nothing to clean the filter media inside the canister, hob or sump or sponge or whatever. The only way to clean your filter...is to physically clean it, at least afaik, if you’ve got a better way for me to have a cleaner filter that requires less attention I’d love to learn it.
Here’s my personal schedule for the three tanks I’m currently running...
Grow out tank gets 10-20% daily water changes, and the hob cartridge rinsed weekly. This keeps the water pristine while allowing me to have food available to fry 24/7.
90g Cichlid tank gets 30% changes every other day, and filter gets cleaned every 2 months as water chemistry and flow doesn’t change noticeably in that time frame, nor does it improve after cleaning, so no need to increase. No, I’m not interested in reducing the frequency of cleaning either.
My 65g planted tank is in flux. It was on the same schedule as the 90 but I just changed to 1x a week water changes to accommodate a dosing regime I’m trying out. I’m only a few weeks in however and I’m not seeing significant improvement with the plants and I am seeing ph swings and detritus buildup and just this week ammonia levels have shown .25ppm and my nitrates are double what they were before on test day. Idk whether it’s from the ferts or the dirt or something else but all fish accounted for and I’m back on more frequent water changes. I know I need to adjust because I test my levels religiously and thus have spotted an issue before my fish told me there was a problem. I’m also on a more frequent filter cleaning schedule as I did a rescape not long ago and the flow is reduced do to extra material getting kicked up.
As you should be able to see from this, when I said start with a schedule then test and observe to adjust when the tank tells you it needs more attention, this is what I meant, not kick back with a beer and wait until something happens, which you seem to think I said. Now if this sounds a little snippy, it’s because it is. When you misconstrue what someone says and then throw out comments like “poor husbandry” all the while admitting to not testing important levels and just assuming they will always be what they always were, I’m gonna get snippy.
Have a good day...
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