moochy13
Fish Herder
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2010
- Messages
- 1,365
- Reaction score
- 2
If you have access to mature media then then you are instantly cycled and you don't have to worry.
yes and no. fish can be added, but you wont be able to fully stock your tank. you will still have to build up the bacteria. the rough guide is that i could give you 30% of my filter media without risking disaster in my tank. naturally this would mean you could stock to about 30-40% of what you wanted (though this is complicated by which fish you want) but for ease lets say you wanted 10 guppies. with 30% of my mature media, you could put 3-5 guppies in straight away, and things should stay under control in the tank, while hopefully your bacteria are multiplying into your 'un-matured' media. a 5-7 days later say, you could add another 2 or 3, keeping on top of water changes, testing the water, keeping an eye out for signs of bad water (red gills, lazy fish, fish hanging at the surface). then maybe after 2 and a half weeks or so you would go to your full 10 guppies.
just an example, but i would say you could half the time at least by obtaining some mature media. i actually did a fish in cycle from scratch, no mature media to use. i was forced into it because i had to rehome some fish very quickly. it took me about 3 weeks of changing about 40-50% of the water every other day before all my fish were in and the tank was settled. BUT, i had fish in my tank from day one. not ideal as during the first few days, as i had no mature media, i was changing water EVERY day.
if you can get some media, you still need to be picky about what fish you put in first. in which case you need to decide what you want. from a purely financial point of view, i wouldnt want to put the dwarf cichlids in first, incase things go wrong. cherry barbs may be a good choice, but i used tetras when cycling mine to begin with. some fish, like neons, are pretty weak and dont do well in a new established tank, let alone one which is cycling. other fish (catfish in general) create lots of mess, which can put unneccessary pressure on you as you try keep the water nice.
lots to think about, numero uno is trying to get some media to help your cycling decision. numero dos is deciding which shoaling fish you want (at most i would have 2 types, each groups of about 8), you need to decide on this incase you decide to fish in cycle. shoaling fish, like barbs and tetras, should be kept in groups of at least 6 so they exhibit some hint of natural behaviour, and they wont hide away. personal preference is that more impact can come from 1 or 2 decent sized shoals than 3 smaller shoals.