Active Users:1156 Time:23/11/2024 12:33:50 AM
i've actually never been a fan of fishless water cycling myself.... moondog Send a noteboard - 03/06/2010 02:16:42 AM
The nitrates and ammonia were acceptable. I did weekly water changes (~25 of the tank). I let the tank establish for about two weeks before adding the fish the last time (Goldfish try). With the platties I let it establish for a week.

I tried 3 platties and I tried 2 gold fish (these were on two separate tries). The water I used is from the town.

I bought the appropriate food for each fish as well when I tried the different breeds. So I'm not trying to give them something inappropriate.

Before the fish died, each one was lethargic, tending to hide in the fixtures and not bothering to eat. Usually the next day or so I found it dead on the tank bottom or stuck next to the intake for the filter. Hence my thought that maybe the filter pump was too powerful for the tank. The pump/filter I have is linked below. I got mine at Petco.

I had heard that I may want to try and hide the filter intake behind some scenery to prevent the fish from getting sucked towards it. Would you agree?

I miss the goldfish I had when I was a kid. It swam in a glass bowl with marbles on the bottom and was frickin' indestructible. He lived for 8 years. :(


i've never used that brand of filter before, but you do have the right idea that you should have *slightly* more filtration than the tank size. so a filter of 10-20g capacity is right on with what will make most fish happy. hiding the intake behind something usually ends up with choking the filter off, so i would tend to disagree with that. healthy fish will be able to get out of the current, although if the filter was *too* strong of course it would be a problem. you can tell by how the fish act if they don't like the current in the tank and adjust the flow accordingly. they'll usually hide behind a rock/plant to escape the current if it's too much for them. also, it's usually better to block the output of the filter before considering blocking the input as a general rule.

if you are getting your fish from petco as well as your filter, that may be a reason for concern. those fish are not always the healthiest, it's all a matter of watching them for a bit before you decide which ones to buy. make sure you get strong fish that don't have oddly shaped bodies and no abnormal marks or signs of disease. from your description it sounds like your fish were not the healthiest specimens, but you didn't say how long it was between when you brought them home and when they started acting lethargic.
"The RIAA has shown a certain disregard for the creative people of the industry in their eagerness to protect the revenues of the record companies." -- Frank Zappa

"That's the trouble with political jokes in this country... they get elected!" -- Dave Lippman
Reply to message
Question for Aquarium Owners - 02/06/2010 12:21:05 AM 525 Views
Remove the shark. *NM* - 02/06/2010 01:10:54 AM 198 Views
Check the pH. *NM* - 02/06/2010 01:27:22 AM 209 Views
pH is fine. Water is a little hard but that's it. *NM* - 02/06/2010 01:53:37 AM 202 Views
what brand/model of filter do you have? - 02/06/2010 02:30:54 AM 486 Views
Wondered how long that would take. - 02/06/2010 03:04:53 AM 446 Views
Re: what brand/model of filter do you have? - 02/06/2010 05:26:10 PM 639 Views
i've actually never been a fan of fishless water cycling myself.... - 03/06/2010 02:16:42 AM 572 Views
Time from home to fish lethargy was ~2 weeks. - 03/06/2010 07:43:22 PM 499 Views
try having your water tested at the store - 04/06/2010 01:08:04 AM 415 Views
how many fish are you putting in that little tank? - 02/06/2010 09:31:29 PM 391 Views
Too much food can kill fish. - 02/06/2010 10:33:34 PM 429 Views
I just came in to add "Stop peeing in it" to the unhelpful joke answers. *NM* - 03/06/2010 11:16:54 PM 209 Views

Reply to Message