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Recognizing Fishless and Aquarium Cycling

graceward

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Hello everyone,

I am new to fishkeeping & trying to get a handle on the best practices for setting up my first aquarium. I am confused about is the cycling process, regarding fishless cycling. I am looking for guidance on how to cycle my tank correctly before adding fish.

What is Fishless Cycling?
What are the target ranges for these parameters, and how can I ensure they are at safe levels before adding fish?
What test kits are recommended for monitoring water parameters during cycling?
How do I ensure a smooth transition and prevent spikes in ammonia or nitrite?

Also i have read this resorse/artical; https://www.fishforums.net/threads/cycle-your-tank-auipath-installation-complete-guide-for-beginners.475055/ but have not found any solution still need your advice. if you have any advice please share with me

My last question is What are some common pitfalls that new hobbyists face during the cycling process, and how can I avoid them?

Thanks in advance:)
 
The link in your post contains a step by step guide on how to do a fishless cycle. If the method is followed exactly, you don't even have to understand why.

The most common pitfall is failure to follow this method and adding too much ammonia. Too much ammonia makes so much nitrite the cycle stalls. This method was written so that if ammonia is only added when certain target levels have been reached nitrite cannot reach stall point.
 
As the person who wrote the fishless cycling article here, I am happy to answer ant questions you have and to help out if you get stuck. But it is an easy to follow method and almost impossible to screw up when followed to the letter.
 
What are the target ranges for these parameters, and how can I ensure they are at safe levels before adding fish?
Cycling focuses on nitrogens - ammonia, nitrite and nitrate. A cycled tank will maintain 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite and, ideally, less than 20ppm nitrate. Until fish (or ammonia) are added the water won't have nitrogens. The fish expel ammonia when breathing, pooping and urinating. By adding ammonia as prescribed in the guide, then testing how it is dealt with, you can determine when the tank is cycled and safe for fish.
 
A vote for silent cycling here. It’s so easy even an idiot like me managed it*.



* forgot to take photo of plants when I’d put em all in at the very start. :rolleyes::oops:
 
Hello everyone,

I am new to fishkeeping & trying to get a handle on the best practices for setting up my first aquarium. I am confused about is the cycling process, regarding fishless cycling. I am looking for guidance on how to cycle my tank correctly before adding fish.

What is Fishless Cycling?
What are the target ranges for these parameters, and how can I ensure they are at safe levels before adding fish?
What test kits are recommended for monitoring water parameters during cycling?
How do I ensure a smooth transition and prevent spikes in ammonia or nitrite?

Also i have read this resorse/artical; https://www.fishforums.net/threads/cycle-your-tank-auipath-installation-complete-guide-for-beginners.475055/ but have not found any solution still need your advice. if you have any advice please share with me

My last question is What are some common pitfalls that new hobbyists face during the cycling process, and how can I avoid them?

Thanks in advance:)
AP Master Test kit is the best one.
 

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