arobinson1984
Fish Gatherer
The bacteria in a bottle products very rarely work.
Bacteria needs a food source and oxygen to be able to survive, neither of which it is getting stuck in a bottle on a fish stores shelf for weeks/months/years. Many of these products are 'snake oil' they wont do any harm but wont do much good either so its much better to save your money.
The best way to perform a fishless cycle is to get hold of some household ammonia. It must not contain any dyes, perfumes or surfactants and should not foam when you shake the bottle, just bubble slighty and settle back down. The bottle should only contain ammonium hydroxide (normally at 9.5%) and water. The best places to get household ammonia in the UK are homebase, boots or robert dyas, it will normally be with the household cleaning products.
Secondly you will need a good liquid based test kit, the paper test strips have a reputation for being very innaccurate, you may as well jsut stick your finger in the tank and make up a number lol'. The most popular liquid test kit is the API freshwater master kit which includes everything you would need as a beginner, it tests for PH, ammonia, nitrite & nitrate. Saliferts make very good accurate tests as well but I believe these must be bought seperately and cant be bought all together in a 'master kit' as such.
Andy
Bacteria needs a food source and oxygen to be able to survive, neither of which it is getting stuck in a bottle on a fish stores shelf for weeks/months/years. Many of these products are 'snake oil' they wont do any harm but wont do much good either so its much better to save your money.
The best way to perform a fishless cycle is to get hold of some household ammonia. It must not contain any dyes, perfumes or surfactants and should not foam when you shake the bottle, just bubble slighty and settle back down. The bottle should only contain ammonium hydroxide (normally at 9.5%) and water. The best places to get household ammonia in the UK are homebase, boots or robert dyas, it will normally be with the household cleaning products.
Secondly you will need a good liquid based test kit, the paper test strips have a reputation for being very innaccurate, you may as well jsut stick your finger in the tank and make up a number lol'. The most popular liquid test kit is the API freshwater master kit which includes everything you would need as a beginner, it tests for PH, ammonia, nitrite & nitrate. Saliferts make very good accurate tests as well but I believe these must be bought seperately and cant be bought all together in a 'master kit' as such.
Andy