Yeah I was thinking that only been cycling the tank about a week aswell hopefully not to long now
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That is a very quick cycle. Dr. Tim's helps, but it still takes time and is not an 'instant' cycle.
Most of those products say on their labels that fish can be added immediately... and that's true... to an extent. The bacteria take a while to establish on surfaces (that's where they live normally... inside of biofilm), and then a while to start to process ammonia and nitrite.
Early introduction of fish just means (with no artificial additions of ammonia) that by the time that the bacteria are ready to start processing... ammonia is present. And then the bacteria start to deal with it. And as long as the amount of fish is reasonably small for the tank and compared to the amount of bacterial product added... then the bacteria can deal with the ammonia and nitrite before it can be come a serious issue for the fish.
However, that then means adding fish slowly over a period of months... allowing time for the bacterial colony to grow with each addition of new fish. And... you end up having to wait about 6 months, many times, before you have a fully stocked tank.
By going the full fishless cycle route as we recommend... and following our instructions, you can have a fully cycled tank in about 6 weeks give or take... even with no addition of any bacterial starter. With a bacterial starter, it will obviously be significantly shorter.
And at about the 6 month marker... your tank will likely be in the 'sweet spot' as maturity goes... not too young to be missing elements of the ecosystem needed to maintain balance... and not so old as to have potentially built up excess waste if not properly cleaned.
And for this reason, (and a few others) I recommend semi-annual huge water changes... and extensive gravel/substrate vaccing. This gives the tank a bit of a 'restart' and keeps the water parameters very close to the tap water levels. Ramping up to this, the weeks proceeding the 'big' change, I change out a little more water than normal. So a routine water change of 25%, becomes closer to about 35-40%. And then the big water change is always at least 50%, and likely closer to about 75%. Adding the water back to the tank at near the same temp (usually a degree or so lower - simulating a 'thaw upstream'...) slowly over the course of a couple hours (I use a hose connected to my kitchen sink to temp match and regulate the speed of the refill...) and usually afterwards I reward the fish with some 'special treats' like frozen blood worms (thawed, of course) or similar. And they reward me with fantastic behavior displays of schooling, breeding, etc. They get very active during the days to follow... not 'stressed', but 'busy'... Checking out new areas (it usually comes with a bit of a tank rearrangement as I need to move some stuff to clean areas that don't normally get vacced) and zooming around together.
I honestly believe they like it.