I did little research, bought the tank, bought the fish, and then once the fish were in the tank i did more research to find out about fishless cycling. At that point i crossed my fingers and hoped that the fish were quicken the process and they dont die.
The amount of fish are in the other post
TWO currently small silver dollars about 2 1/2 inches long
FIVE african dwarf frogs (small in size, about an inch long)
TWO neon tetras
ONE red wag platy
ONE black molly
ONE dalmatian molly
ONE kuhli loach (small in diameter, like a string)
ONE algae eater ( i am not sure for the name. The receipt says algae eater. It is not a plecostomus)
and it is a 30 gallon tank. Yes i know. I didnt know at the time of buying the silver dollars that they would need so much space when they grow. It has a 200 watt heater i just bought, as the one i had died yesterday. The filter is a 20-40 gallon from walmart.
I have Jungle quick dip test strips. I checked yesterday and everything looked good. There is no exact reading, but color comparisons.
water hardness GH 300 ppm
nitrate near 0
nitrite near 0 also
KH ppm 300
pH somehwere between 7.2 and 7.8
Its hard to tell the colors but that is about what the charts say for the colors on the test strip
If you have not done the fish-less cycle and are doing the cycle with fish in it, you definitely have too many fish in the tank and will cause a deadly increase of ammonia along with the amount of foods you are giving to the fish
So at this point i am kicking myself in the a** for not researching before buying the fish. Now that i have them, do i need to do more than normal water changes to account for this increase of ammonia?
In addition, i bought a 5 gallon tank. In that i have a male crowntail betta, and a single dwarf frog in that. They seem to be OK together. And i just noticed that the betta just made a bubble nest yesterday. I also plopped these into the tank brand new with no cycling.
In both tanks, the rocks did not look bad at all. I was just kinda testing the siphon. I was just surpised at all the poop and food that came up with it.