Please let me know what you guys think of these three methods! Also, go check out the description where I give specific situations these tips may come in handy!
I have poured the bottom of a canister filter into the tank (quite disgusting) and filtered through a new HOB filter and two established sponge filters. The following day vacuum and add treated water. Many years of this procedure but it's always nice to run across these videos from time to time. Thanks!
@@OtterCreekAquatics That's what Daybot said... You have to have things from an already established tank meaning it's unless for people who are starting their first tank...
I use pool filter sand for substrate in all of my aquariums, I have 7 aquariums! 30g-120g. Pool filter sand is very heavy, clean& you can vacuum it like gravel, its so heavy, it automatically drops back to the bottom without worry of it being ducking into your filter. A 50lbs bag costed me $27 🇺🇸 that includes shipping. I am def 👍for pool filter sand as aquarium substrate. Love it so much & wanted to share! ❤❤
I thought you were about to tell us what we can do if we can’t get a used sponge, not tell us where to get them 😅 was kind of hoping to get help with that situation. Maybe it’s just not possible or a good idea to quick start a cycle without a used sponge?
These are good ideas and I agree with a lot of it. I think that especially with the flow of new people who want to learn to set up a tank, giving them the idea of an "instant" set up tends to moslead folks. If this is a method to set up a new aquarium when you have others, i would put that in the title, so you won't have anyone misinterpret what you mean. I work at a fish store, and get tired of getting asked about "instant" ways to set up a tank. I always answer with due diligence by reading up on it and the nitrogen cycle, and patience. Anyway, this was a well made video. Keep it up!.
Yes, if you are just setting up the first aquarium you need to wait for the nitrifying bacteria to establish so it can handle the ammonia that builds up from fish food and waste.
While I used to disagree with adding water from an old aquarium I now agree with this method. It doesn’t hurt a thing for 1 there are already usually some nitrates in your water and second that water has been oxygenated for a while. While there may not be much BB in the water there is some and when I used the half tank water half declorinated method I found Nitrites present within a couple of days. This is not possible by just using straight faucet de chlorinated water. I’ve tested this method and it works!
Solid, easy to follow, information. Nice video. Stay yourself, don't become a clone, to grow. Thanks for the vid man. EDIT: KENDALL thanks for asking me for clarification on my comments. There is nothing in this or any of your vids that copies or clones other YTers. Your appeal, especially to experienced fish keepers like myself, is that you do your research and present it in an organized easy to understand format. You keep things real and in your own unique style. You are always open to discussion and there for the fish and the hobby. Drama free.. My comment is meant to be a compliment on that style and as an after thought, encourage and thank you not to give into to things that some of the big channels might do for clicks. Keep being yourself, like you are in this and all your vids. Peace man. (Old fart pulls foot from mouth)
Great layout on the video, I have a feeling your channel is going to take off soon. You put alot of time and thought into your videos and it's going to pay off. Keep it up bro. And yeah. Just squeeze out my dirtiest filters into new tanks with seeded sponges from established tanks.
Ah!!! I wouldn't go that far, but either way I appreciate your alls support and love the small group that we have right now! Love the hobby and love sharing my experiences!!!
You made this whole F%$$#@ process sooooooooo easy. I spent a fortune on Fritz 7, quick start and all this other junk . So glad I found your channel thank you
Great vid for beginners! Just another tip tho, get the temp in your new tank as close as you can get it to the existing tank. Bacteria are living orginasims and just like fish you don't want to temperature shock the BB!
Great video. After trying to start my 1st tank, I learned through watching videos like this. I am getting ready to start a 55G 21"Tall as a room-divider Planted scaped Community Aquarium. I have the Aqueon 30 in my established Quarantine Tank for a few months now. I have an extra inch of gravel sitting in to mix with the new tank. I also have extra Rocks, Plants, and Driftwood sitting in the Quarantine Tank. I have a few bags of Ceramic Media Rings growing in my Betta Tank and in the Quarantine Tank. I have Media Bags filled with different types of Clay, along with Fluval Red Flourite sitting in the Quarantine Tank. I am still collecting ingredients to create the Dirtier Substrate to set up both the 55G 21"Tall Community Tank and the 20G 12"T Long for my Betta. I have planned this since December 2022 when I decided to give my Betta more places hide in and to investigate. It is true about local Aquarium Clubs. I have a few that will share media and some water-change water with me.
I use substrate and sponges from my established tank but still never chance adding fish for at least 2 weeks. Not disputing your methods I'm just super careful. If it's a 10 or 20 gal. But not a 50 or 75gal.
There is zero reason to cycle a tank if you don't mind doing a few water changes. I have taken 50 gallon tanks, added 10 Discus at a cost of often nearly a thousand dollars, and put them in day old tap water. Do a daily water change of about 20 percent and you have a perfectly cycled tank in a couple of weeks. Not once in those two weeks will you ever have a test come back even close to being bad. I don't even test anymore. There is no way you will ever have an issue doing this.
@@missyy1666 Yes, depending on the size of the tank. If it's like a ten gallon tank and it's a single Betta you could easily get by with every two days, maybe three days. If it's a little half-gallon bowl I would go with a 20 percent change every day for a couple of weeks until it cycles.
So if I follow all the three tips you giving us can I on the top if it add Seachem beneficial bacterial to further enhance the overall effect and speed up the cycling of the tank?
Plants from established aquariums might also a carrier of beneficial bacteria, so instead of buying a bunch of aquatic plants online or in a petstore, trim off some of your mosses and stem plants on your already established aquarium tank and it will give you a big help.
Very informative/helpful video. I've done this method BUT, as mentioned, it needs seed bacteria. As much as you can get determines the success. Filters, rocks, logs/wood. Those double sponge filters are excellent. Grab a spare, swap with a dirty one and its a startup but it takes more. I also run a small HOB to move around. I found live, fast growing plants are very helpful. Hornwort, java moss, foxtail eat the nitrates put off by the nitrogen cycle. Also, the rooted plants that come in little pot with rockwool hold beneficial bacteria too!
Can I take 5gallons of water from a established tank and pour it in the new tank Will that work as well for establishing the new tank Or would that water be too dirty 🤷🏼♂️✌️🇨🇦
I'm getting a 240l tank with axolotl already living in it, but it's a 4 hour drive and the water is gonna be out. I'm getting it with the filter and substrate - now the owner tells me I have to wait for at least 6 weeks to add the axolotl but I think it will be much more dangerous to have them quarantined for such a long time (daily water changes) what do you think? Obviously I'm gonna run it for a while and test the water. But 6 weeks seems kind of long for me to keep any animal in a plastic box even with daily care and water changes.
Hi!first of all thank you for everything you do, I instantly subscribed! Can I ask you something? I have 2 months old fry and I need as soon as possibile a cycled tank. I recently bought a bigger tank for them ( about 38 gallons) and I always change the water to keep it clean. Yesterday I bought a dual sponge filter and today I put it in the old tank ( the parents tank). It’s a good idea? When can I put the sponger filter in the new tank? What else can i do? in the new tank I just have a mechanical filter! thank you.
Need to know the same thing.! I squeezed my sponge filter into the tank and let it sit for about 20 mins before adding a cap of cleaner Bc I’m going to get my fish from petco to start. But after those 20 mins should I have turned my filter on and let my filter plus decorations and gravel get the bacteria from the sponge? Or just keep the same water and add a couple careless fish and see how they do in the water? I kind of get it but I don’t wanna put my baby Oscar in the 20 gal to make sure it’s ok for the juvenile after I breed him in the bigger tank. Just want to make sure I raise my baby Oscar the right and healthy way before moving him into a different tank plus will this 20 gallon be ok for his kids and plenty more
@@laroydaniels260 Take the sponge from a different tank/filter, put it in your new tank/filter and leave it. Don't squeeze it out thinking it will help, don't remove it after 20 minutes, just leave it.
If i take established "filter"from 20gal and put it on 50 gal can i move all fish at same time considering that the filter has enough bio already just more water volume , 50 has had squeezed sponge done and been running for a week
If you are just transferring all of your fish from your old tank (20gallon) to the new tank (50gallon) then yes that will work. If you move everything else from the 20 gallon (plants, decor. Substate) then it will make it even more safe. After you move the fish I would wait a few days to feed just so your not creating extra ammonia that any loss of bacteria you have wont be able to handle. I hope this helps!!!!
in addition to any of those simply take a gallon or 3 of the water from your old tank and also add it to new tank then replace the water you took out with fresh and walla youve helped start the new one and given the old tank a pick me up which is wat i do when i need a tank fast aka quarentining a sick fish
Would you by any chance sell one? I just bought a new tank for a future Betta fish and I’m trying to quick start it. Unfortunately the only store I have around is a pet store that doesn’t take good care of their tanks/fish, so I don’t think they even cycle their tanks water.
Something ive been thinking about for healthy tanks could u not just take water from one tank and put it in the new just like taking out for a water change? Especially if the new tank is smaller
Awwsome video! When I establish my new tank, I take my sponge filter from a healthy cycled tank along with some of the water from that tank. I do this so it matches the water parameters and temperatures so the fresh water, that I eventually add won't kill the beneficial bacteria on my sponge. I also have ornaments that I transfer, those will give it a little boost as well. Someone posted using cycled gravel and substrates to establish new tanks, that works wonders, I get a little ocd, I filter out the detritus with a sifter using tank water before placing it in the new tank. Been working for me for years.
Ive done this, i still have no fish in the tank, but after i put and squeeze the sponge in my tank, tank gets cloudy and dirty. Is this normal? Is the beneficial bacteria already in my tank? Ps: i dont have gravel, only got surface bottom tank
Oh, i just squeezed it and forgot to put the sponge in the tank, but i cut some portion of the sponge and i put it in my filter cartridge. Also, i notice some algae forming in the artificial plant. Is the tank cycled now?
If you have algae growing that is a good sign that the tank is cycled, what size tank is it, what filtration are you using, and what/how many fish are you planning to add to it? Also, do you have a water quality test kit?
Ok ill add fish now. i only small tank. Jst a beginner tank. Currently using hangon filter and an airpump. planning to have a koi fish. I want to start one only, just gonna have one at a time
Yeah I did the same thing for all 10 of my tanks and I haven't had any problems. I have to do things that are 5 gallons and rest of my are 3 gallons how often should I do water changes on the smaller tanks? I'm asking because I noticed that my Bell tolls are starting to lose color and their fins. The tail looks clear. Someone laughs and looks like it melted away. Thanks for 2 years but I'm really having a hard time keeping male Bettas alive. Female bettas for some reason they don't have any problems. I am American living in Taiwan. It's a 50-50 chance if you get a healthy bettas. Which reminds me what's the best way to treat in case they may have some kind of illness. Aquarium salt bath that has Aloe for 15 minutes everyday for a week? Or maybe I should use methylene blue and do the same process? Because from what I can tell my betta sorry they're getting fin rot or the fins are getting burned from ammonia. I feed my baby does every other day. They get five to six pellets and I drop them in one time. No extra food. I don't overfeed them and I'm constantly checking the plants for any dead leaves or roots. Once a week I do water changes on alll my tanks. I use a gravel vac. Every two weeks I do a full water change. I rinse out the filter sponge old water. How do you clean out the filter using the filter rush. of course when I add water always a good dechlorinator and I and I plant food. I can't think of anything else to do that would be needed. I can get my male Bettas to live longer than 4 months. I have two females that I bought immediately when they came in and I've had them for a year. I guess that prevented them from getting sick
Wait a month, when the cycle is almost done, when grey cloudy water is finally crystal clear. This video kinda shows you what can you do if you start a 2nd aquarium, instead of waiting that much you can do it almost instant using your already cycled filters ornaments plants etc..
I just started without a used sponge. I got no other viable responses. I allowed my tank to run with treated water for 3 weeks before adding a bit of leaf zone. I let that run one more week before adding plants. 2 more weeks and I added my fish. They seem to be thriving and my guppies are breeding.
I have an established 20 gallon and just set up a 55 gallon. The 55 gallon has some of the original substrate but a new filter. I have 8 Panda corydoras in it and am worried they’ll fall ill. I have a few plants, a moss ball, and a plant from my established tank. I will use the sponge method today.... any encouraging words or advice? The people at the fish store said it would be fine but as I’m reading online, I’m increasingly worried about them.
I’ve done it , I put decoration from a cycled tank , or use the filter from a cycled filter , I also used stability , the bacterial in bottle .... On 12 fish only one died .... surely some ammonia spike happened , but the beneficial bacterial did multiply so quicker that the ammonia spike lasted very shortly
My canister pump was left with a bit of water from the previous established setup, for about 4 months. There was still some water in it when I started my new aquarium, do you think it would still work? I mean it was maybe less than half a cup of water still in the canister filter, and the aquarium is 65 gallons.
It wouldn’t work, if you unplugged your pump for 4 months the bacteria in your filter have died because they need oxygen and moving bodies of water to stay alive and cultivate.
quick question. i have a fluval 207 canister filter on my aquarium that has being established for about 12months . my sister wants to get a little 40lt tank going and id like to start her off so my question is can i take the sponge filter from a aqueal fan 1 filter i have and put it in to the fluval canister for a cuple of weeks to get it loaded ??? look forward to reply thanks
What if there is a sponge in a well established tank that just keeps on sinking in the tank without a filter?Can we use that sponge in our new tank to instantly cycle the new tank?
Iv just acquired my sisters fish tank after her fresh water fish died. It's filter has dried out cos it's been a week can I still use the spong to get my aquarium going. I already have to aquariums on the go which I love
Sadly I do not have an already established tank. I just bought a new 10 gallon setup. only 1 tank. Brand new along with a brand now HOB filter that came with filter media which includes a bio bag and a gel. My betta fish is sitting in his little cup. I had no choice but to set up a brand new tank as my old tank's filter just burnt out. So the only option I have is to do a quick cycle. So I am kind of stuck with trying to find options to do a quick cycle
It depends on everything that's in the old tank. Does it have gravel, sand, decorations, drift wood, live plants? Everything in your tank will contain beneficial bacteria. So if you set up a new tank, take as much stuff from the older tank and put it in there. Even if there is a tiny bit of bacterial introduced to your new tank it will excel super quickly and from there be "cycled" for your betta
He explained what to do if you are just starting up, if you have a friend that has an established aquarium, ask them for some used medium....or ask your local fish store to help out.
so u can ask friends for recycled filters or sponges or can ask a pet store for that or u can buy a new filter and ask if u can swap it out for a filter they were already using since that benefitial bacteria would alr have built up in their tanks so a new filter wouldn’t cause them any issues
What if I do this for shrimp (RCS)? I've just added the sponge filter gunk from an already established aquarium into a new 17G tank with a new sponge filter. I have not added any shrimp yet but was wondering when I can?? Do I have to feed the aquarium bacteria with some flake food until I add the shrimp or is the dirty sponge water enough?
The tank needs ammonia to feed the bacteria. Without any form of fish waste/ammonia the bacteria will eventually die off. It can only help if you add a little fish food to the tank so the bacteria can get the ammonia it needs to continue to grow.
Yes, but one of the bad things about filter cartridges is the carbon inside. If you dont change it eventually it will leach stuff it had pulled out of the tank before back into the tank
Do you have a local fish store? If so they will have some cycled filter media for you to use. If not the next best thing would be get some live plants and slowly feed your tank fish food as if there were fish in it. That will introduce ammonia and start your cycle
There are a number of products that will instantly cycle your tank. I used “SafeStart” from Tetra (easily found on Amazon or your pet shop) that will add bacteria and cycle your tank. You can add fish minutes after adding the product.
Its okay for a fresh setup, but its NOT okay to add fish until the nitrogen cycle has completed. Add a little fish food every 3 or 4 days to make ammonia, so nitrite will develop & then nitrates to take over. Nitrates is where you want to be (4-8 weeks) then you just need to do maintenance & weekly eater changes 👍😃
I’ve been using a product called Seachem Stability for awhile now. It’s worked great for me. Though it’s a little annoying having to keep purchasing every month or so. I’m afraid to stop using it for some reason though I’m sure there’s got to be enough beneficial bacteria in my tank after having my Oscar for nearly 2 years in it.
I've never used that product but I am aware of it. Do you have anything else in your Oscar tank? Substrate, Drift wood, plants, or is it just bare bottom and 2 sponge filters
Otter Creek Aquatics There’s is absolutely nothing in the tank other than the Oscar, 2 heaters, 2 sponges, and an air stone. He destroys any plants that I try and add, and I fear that adding any substrate will trap waste and other things that I cannot see. I’m not really a fan of that water vacuum thing.
I was going to say, if you have a bunch of other stuff in the tank you will have a lot of beneficial bacteria over all of it. Keep doing what you're doing if it's working, but don't be scared to take a risk
If I take gravel out of my 125g established tank and put it into my new 10 gallon tank (plan on putting in about 2 inches worth) will that cycle it enough to add about 7 mollies the same day?
Hello thank you for this explenation , i have a question for you i have a brand new fish tank i do have sponge filters extra with beneficial bacteria , i do also have other fishtanks and weekly water change because i have cichlids and one fishtank i have is big enough to fill up my new fishtank can i use the old water and put it in my new fishtank aswell ?
Another thing I do is I like to use any decor from an already established fish tank. If u have a bunch of tanks u can take a piece or two from each and boom u have bacteria spread thru out the tank as well. I also use old filter pads like u mentioned.
It all depends on how many fish you are going to be adding honestly, and what size the fish are. Also, if you do any of these methods make sure you don't feed for a few days after adding the fish to avoid any ammonia spikes
Otter Creek Aquatics let’s say the ammonia spikes happen, (which will happen bevause I forgot to clear out some algae wafers in my tank and my bettas went after them, what steps should I prepare tomorrow morning or for the coming days ahead
DANKdaHERBALIST would you use wood that would be in your tank? Would that help to cycle? I’m upgrading my tank but I have to have my guppies live somewhere until the new tank is cycling.
Hi, is it normal if my new tank water gets super dirty like dark brown after i squeeze old filter sponge into the tank? Will the water clear and is it harmful for the plants? Currently have no fish in tank. Advice would help!
hi so i have a ten gallon but just got a 20, and have been told cycling takes about 2 months and uh... let's say i don't have that kind of time because the 20 gallon is sitting on my floor until i move my 10 gall onto my desk. i do have a dirty filter cartridge, but it's not a sponge so will it still work?? great video btw
@@nataliemarquez2512 problem solved! I actually ordered some charcoal and put two medium sized pieces in the tank with water, I planted the crap out of the tank and used beneficial bacteria to start the tank. I waited about three days and then added some shrimp, waited two more days and then added the fish! I hope this helps :)
So effectively if I have a 300L tank, and upgrade it to a 600L tank shutting down the 300L and moving all of the substrate, filter media, decor will immediately have my tank cycled provided I don't kill the bacteria living on all of it with sticking fresh tap water all over it?
So my job has a fish tank, can I dip the filter into my tank at home to get that bacteria? I’m sorry I’m watching this at work with loud nap time music playing so I can’t really focus. But I want to know before I leave work lol
Yes you could do that. I would squeeze all of the filter material into your tank. Its gonna leave a mess but after a few days just vacuum out all the debris
The key centance i ear you say is ad a few fish ,and that really is the crucial part here.if one takes a bare aquarium and puts a floatingplant in there and one fish than that tank is cycled.if you put 20 fish in it it is not.on the other hand if you feed that one fish tons of food that it can not proces the tank wil not be cycled wereas if you dont feed that 20 fish for the first week and sifon out the waste they produce than that tank is also cycled.😊
How do you know it was an instant filter cycle. The only way to know for sure is that you would have a good amount of nitrates not nitrites on your test strip. Free to go through a cycle your tank will be breaking down the ammonia, that turns into nitrites and then you have a good amount of nitrates that is really not harmless to your fish You won't have a reading of nitrates if you did not go through the cycle I was told this method only works if you take the sponge from one hang on the back filter and you put it in another hang on back filter I was told just putting it in the water does not work.. it might give you some beneficial bacteria but not nearly as much if you put it in the new tank filter.
It won't give you the same amount of bacteria or not enough, but once the fish get in there and start creating ammonia the bacteria will rapidly grow to compensate. The goal is to just get the starter bacteria in the tank
Yes. But brackish bacteria is slightly different. As time passes the bacteria will grow that lives in a brackish tank naturally. We had to do this on our puffer tank.
Hi and thanks for the thorough explanation. So I'm new to the hobby, gathering information at the moment, setting my aquarium in 2-3 weeks time. If I get some beneficial bacteria from someone's HOB filter, or a sponge filter or whatever, shouldn't I treat the water with meds or salt before I introduce any fish? Thanks for the help and best wishes to all.
I don't believe this is necessary, the meds and salt are great for medicating sick fish and a little aquarium salt would not do much harm but in my opinion, I don't think it is necessary to add them. The cycle is what you need to begin in your newly setup aquarium more emphasis should be placed on ways to get the cycle going rather than treating with medications unless you may be expecting sick fish of some sort. When I first started my tank no salt or meds were added just live bacteria and I was fully through the cycle a couple weeks after. Do monitor your fish's health though just in case you may need to add any meds in the future. Also, to note, it is wise to treat sick fish separately rather than all at once if the rest are ok.
Please let me know what you guys think of these three methods! Also, go check out the description where I give specific situations these tips may come in handy!
Otter Creek Aquatics this is my first aquarium i don’t have a used filter
Do you have a local fish store?
Can I change full water in aquarium if i use quick start..please reply
@@sufaldas3582 Don't change all the water. only do a maximum of 30%-50% of water always. Your fish will die from shock if you change all the water.
@@bens4801 you can do up to 80% water changes depending on the bioload, 50% isnt enough for fish like cichlids.
Exactly how I cycle all my tanks. Worked on about 12 tanks.
I'm glad you are ahead of the game! you're a great fish keeper, man!
I have poured the bottom of a canister filter into the tank (quite disgusting) and filtered through a new HOB filter and two established sponge filters. The following day vacuum and add treated water. Many years of this procedure but it's always nice to run across these videos from time to time. Thanks!
INSTANT TANK CYCLE ! Same day fish add. Disclaimer : ONLY IF YOU HAVE ANOTHER TANK ALREADY, AND IT IS ESTABLISHED.
The water will be no benefit so just use all fresh dechlorinated water. However, items from the cycled tank will be
@@OtterCreekAquatics That's what Daybot said... You have to have things from an already established tank meaning it's unless for people who are starting their first tank...
@@Bookhardtsbooks many ways to do this… lol asking people, pets stores, ects
I use pool filter sand for substrate in all of my aquariums, I have 7 aquariums! 30g-120g. Pool filter sand is very heavy, clean& you can vacuum it like gravel, its so heavy, it automatically drops back to the bottom without worry of it being ducking into your filter. A 50lbs bag costed me $27 🇺🇸 that includes shipping. I am def 👍for pool filter sand as aquarium substrate. Love it so much & wanted to share! ❤❤
Thanks i bet it looks beautiful😍
I thought you were about to tell us what we can do if we can’t get a used sponge, not tell us where to get them 😅 was kind of hoping to get help with that situation. Maybe it’s just not possible or a good idea to quick start a cycle without a used sponge?
Awesome vid! Working on cycling 78 new aquariums right now!
I watched that video today. Very interesting way to do it. It's a win win doing it with black worms in my opinion
These are good ideas and I agree with a lot of it. I think that especially with the flow of new people who want to learn to set up a tank, giving them the idea of an "instant" set up tends to moslead folks. If this is a method to set up a new aquarium when you have others, i would put that in the title, so you won't have anyone misinterpret what you mean. I work at a fish store, and get tired of getting asked about "instant" ways to set up a tank. I always answer with due diligence by reading up on it and the nitrogen cycle, and patience. Anyway, this was a well made video. Keep it up!.
“Have you ever set up a fish tank & wanted to add fish the very same day? “ 😳😳 ... uhhh I didn’t know I couldn’t . Explained a lot right there😢💔.
Yes, if you are just setting up the first aquarium you need to wait for the nitrifying bacteria to establish so it can handle the ammonia that builds up from fish food and waste.
Now you know 🥰
i also use 75% water from an existing established tank.. thanks for these tips.
Fantastic brother I also fill the new aquarium with half the water from an already established aquarium.
Just use dechlorinated tap water. There's very little bacteria in the water column.
While I used to disagree with adding water from an old aquarium I now agree with this method. It doesn’t hurt a thing for 1 there are already usually some nitrates in your water and second that water has been oxygenated for a while. While there may not be much BB in the water there is some and when I used the half tank water half declorinated method I found Nitrites present within a couple of days. This is not possible by just using straight faucet de chlorinated water. I’ve tested this method and it works!
Solid, easy to follow, information. Nice video. Stay yourself, don't become a clone, to grow. Thanks for the vid man. EDIT: KENDALL thanks for asking me for clarification on my comments. There is nothing in this or any of your vids that copies or clones other YTers. Your appeal, especially to experienced fish keepers like myself, is that you do your research and present it in an organized easy to understand format. You keep things real and in your own unique style. You are always open to discussion and there for the fish and the hobby. Drama free.. My comment is meant to be a compliment on that style and as an after thought, encourage and thank you not to give into to things that some of the big channels might do for clicks. Keep being yourself, like you are in this and all your vids. Peace man. (Old fart pulls foot from mouth)
Thanks, buddy. Are you saying this video seemed cloned? Or for future videos?
LOL @@@OtterCreekAquatics for future. You do your own thing.
Great layout on the video, I have a feeling your channel is going to take off soon. You put alot of time and thought into your videos and it's going to pay off. Keep it up bro. And yeah. Just squeeze out my dirtiest filters into new tanks with seeded sponges from established tanks.
Ah!!! I wouldn't go that far, but either way I appreciate your alls support and love the small group that we have right now! Love the hobby and love sharing my experiences!!!
Sharing is my favorite part, also cool to document the process as I build my fishroom.
You made this whole F%$$#@ process sooooooooo easy. I spent a fortune on Fritz 7, quick start and all this other junk . So glad I found your channel thank you
Great vid for beginners! Just another tip tho, get the temp in your new tank as close as you can get it to the existing tank. Bacteria are living orginasims and just like fish you don't want to temperature shock the BB!
That is an awesome tip! Thanks for sharing!!!
Well none of this works if you only got a new tank and nothing else
Good clear instructions, I don't know why some people are saying it's to much info.....cheers from Inverness 🏴
Great video. After trying to start my 1st tank, I learned through watching videos like this. I am getting ready to start a 55G 21"Tall as a room-divider Planted scaped Community Aquarium. I have the Aqueon 30 in my established Quarantine Tank for a few months now. I have an extra inch of gravel sitting in to mix with the new tank. I also have extra Rocks, Plants, and Driftwood sitting in the Quarantine Tank. I have a few bags of Ceramic Media Rings growing in my Betta Tank and in the Quarantine Tank. I have Media Bags filled with different types of Clay, along with Fluval Red Flourite sitting in the Quarantine Tank. I am still collecting ingredients to create the Dirtier Substrate to set up both the 55G 21"Tall Community Tank and the 20G 12"T Long for my Betta. I have planned this since December 2022 when I decided to give my Betta more places hide in and to investigate.
It is true about local Aquarium Clubs. I have a few that will share media and some
water-change water with me.
I used my old filter and squeezed it in my newly set up planted tank with tetra on it.. i also, added fish foods on the tank like normal...
Best video on this topic. And exactly what my new fish hobbies instinc has been telling me. I'm setting up my 3rd tank. Thank you 🐠
I use substrate and sponges from my established tank but still never chance adding fish for at least 2 weeks. Not disputing your methods I'm just super careful. If it's a 10 or 20 gal. But not a 50 or 75gal.
GREAT advice
I'm gonna throw an extra sponge filter in my current tank.
Peace ✌
The first method is always my favorite!
Has it worked for you
Hi there thanks for your videos I had gold fish for 2 weeks now and trying to set up another tank
I’m gonna cry So much information I am so confused I just want fish 😭😭😭
There is zero reason to cycle a tank if you don't mind doing a few water changes. I have taken 50 gallon tanks, added 10 Discus at a cost of often nearly a thousand dollars, and put them in day old tap water. Do a daily water change of about 20 percent and you have a perfectly cycled tank in a couple of weeks. Not once in those two weeks will you ever have a test come back even close to being bad. I don't even test anymore. There is no way you will ever have an issue doing this.
@@kentmccroskey8161 is it okay to do this for bettas as well?
@@kentmccroskey8161 and when you mean daily, you mean everyday?
@@missyy1666 Yes, depending on the size of the tank. If it's like a ten gallon tank and it's a single Betta you could easily get by with every two days, maybe three days. If it's a little half-gallon bowl I would go with a 20 percent change every day for a couple of weeks until it cycles.
@@kentmccroskey8161 i see, i have a 10 gallon tank and one betta so this is something il try out.
So if I follow all the three tips you giving us can I on the top if it add Seachem beneficial bacterial to further enhance the overall effect and speed up the cycling of the tank?
Plants from established aquariums might also a carrier of beneficial bacteria, so instead of buying a bunch of aquatic plants online or in a petstore, trim off some of your mosses and stem plants on your already established aquarium tank and it will give you a big help.
Very informative/helpful video.
I've done this method BUT, as mentioned, it needs seed bacteria.
As much as you can get determines the success.
Filters, rocks, logs/wood.
Those double sponge filters are excellent. Grab a spare, swap with a dirty one and its a startup but it takes more.
I also run a small HOB to move around.
I found live, fast growing plants are very helpful.
Hornwort, java moss, foxtail eat the nitrates put off by the nitrogen cycle.
Also, the rooted plants that come in little pot with rockwool hold beneficial bacteria too!
I agree!!! I have been using moss and hornwort to help when setting up new tanks. It works like a charm!!!!
Good video and spot-on! That's exactly how I do my tanks.
Awesome! I'm glad we are on the same page!! :)
Seachem Prime and Stabilty for the win
Can I take 5gallons of water from a established tank and pour it in the new tank Will that work as well for establishing the new tank Or would that water be too dirty 🤷🏼♂️✌️🇨🇦
Thank you! Recently lost my first betta, I'm preparing the tank for a new one. RIP Nello.
Lesbianary ɢɪʀʟs sorry for your loss 😢
Its always terrible losing fish...I hope the next one works out much better for you
Rip Nello
@@bradleyadair5308 💙💙💙
Sorry for your loss, how old was he?
Ugh but I don't have an established tank..... Must suffer silently while I wait 😩😆
Pretty cleaver idea. Thanks!
I Have no friends with any aquariums but there is a tank at my job that has been running for awhile so I’m going to “borrow” the sponge.
Just buy them a new sponge and take it. If it's been running awhile it's probably established enough that it won't miss the bacteria
@@OtterCreekAquatics Yep, I took there sponge but i replaced it with a new one same day.
I'm getting a 240l tank with axolotl already living in it, but it's a 4 hour drive and the water is gonna be out. I'm getting it with the filter and substrate - now the owner tells me I have to wait for at least 6 weeks to add the axolotl but I think it will be much more dangerous to have them quarantined for such a long time (daily water changes) what do you think? Obviously I'm gonna run it for a while and test the water. But 6 weeks seems kind of long for me to keep any animal in a plastic box even with daily care and water changes.
Hi!first of all thank you for everything you do, I instantly subscribed! Can I ask you something? I have 2 months old fry and I need as soon as possibile a cycled tank. I recently bought a bigger tank for them ( about 38 gallons) and I always change the water to keep it clean. Yesterday I bought a dual sponge filter and today I put it in the old tank ( the parents tank). It’s a good idea? When can I put the sponger filter in the new tank? What else can i do? in the new tank I just have a mechanical filter! thank you.
Just take some water frome the main tank 😐
Is it necessary to let the sponge sitting in the new tank or just squeezing it is enough? Also if it is necessary how long should I let it sit?
Need to know the same thing.! I squeezed my sponge filter into the tank and let it sit for about 20 mins before adding a cap of cleaner Bc I’m going to get my fish from petco to start. But after those 20 mins should I have turned my filter on and let my filter plus decorations and gravel get the bacteria from the sponge? Or just keep the same water and add a couple careless fish and see how they do in the water? I kind of get it but I don’t wanna put my baby Oscar in the 20 gal to make sure it’s ok for the juvenile after I breed him in the bigger tank. Just want to make sure I raise my baby Oscar the right and healthy way before moving him into a different tank plus will this 20 gallon be ok for his kids and plenty more
@@laroydaniels260
Take the sponge from a different tank/filter, put it in your new tank/filter and leave it. Don't squeeze it out thinking it will help, don't remove it after 20 minutes, just leave it.
If i take established "filter"from 20gal and put it on 50 gal can i move all fish at same time considering that the filter has enough bio already just more water volume , 50 has had squeezed sponge done and been running for a week
If you are just transferring all of your fish from your old tank (20gallon) to the new tank (50gallon) then yes that will work. If you move everything else from the 20 gallon (plants, decor. Substate) then it will make it even more safe. After you move the fish I would wait a few days to feed just so your not creating extra ammonia that any loss of bacteria you have wont be able to handle. I hope this helps!!!!
@@OtterCreekAquatics i should have mentioned that there was 5 1" fish and the filter had tons of bio whisper 40 packed full of sponges tons of bio
Thank you ,you have helped me out a lot
in addition to any of those simply take a gallon or 3 of the water from your old tank and also add it to new tank then replace the water you took out with fresh and walla youve helped start the new one and given the old tank a pick me up which is wat i do when i need a tank fast aka quarentining a sick fish
The water has barely any Beneficial bacteria
Would you by any chance sell one? I just bought a new tank for a future Betta fish and I’m trying to quick start it. Unfortunately the only store I have around is a pet store that doesn’t take good care of their tanks/fish, so I don’t think they even cycle their tanks water.
Something ive been thinking about for healthy tanks could u not just take water from one tank and put it in the new just like taking out for a water change? Especially if the new tank is smaller
No you couldn't because the water actually contains no beneficial it actually has to have a surface to grow on
Awwsome video!
When I establish my new tank, I take my sponge filter from a healthy cycled tank along with some of the water from that tank. I do this so it matches the water parameters and temperatures so the fresh water, that I eventually add won't kill the beneficial bacteria on my sponge. I also have ornaments that I transfer, those will give it a little boost as well.
Someone posted using cycled gravel and substrates to establish new tanks, that works wonders, I get a little ocd, I filter out the detritus with a sifter using tank water before placing it in the new tank. Been working for me for years.
Ive done this, i still have no fish in the tank, but after i put and squeeze the sponge in my tank, tank gets cloudy and dirty. Is this normal? Is the beneficial bacteria already in my tank?
Ps: i dont have gravel, only got surface bottom tank
Yes that is normal. If it is possible can you leave the sponge you are squeezing in the new tank in it?
Oh, i just squeezed it and forgot to put the sponge in the tank, but i cut some portion of the sponge and i put it in my filter cartridge. Also, i notice some algae forming in the artificial plant. Is the tank cycled now?
If you have algae growing that is a good sign that the tank is cycled, what size tank is it, what filtration are you using, and what/how many fish are you planning to add to it? Also, do you have a water quality test kit?
Ok ill add fish now. i only small tank. Jst a beginner tank. Currently using hangon filter and an airpump. planning to have a koi fish. I want to start one only, just gonna have one at a time
Yeah I did the same thing for all 10 of my tanks and I haven't had any problems.
I have to do things that are 5 gallons and rest of my are 3 gallons how often should I do water changes on the smaller tanks?
I'm asking because I noticed that my Bell tolls are starting to lose color and their fins. The tail looks clear. Someone laughs and looks like it melted away.
Thanks for 2 years but I'm really having a hard time keeping male Bettas alive.
Female bettas for some reason they don't have any problems.
I am American living in Taiwan. It's a 50-50 chance if you get a healthy bettas.
Which reminds me what's the best way to treat in case they may have some kind of illness.
Aquarium salt bath that has Aloe for 15 minutes everyday for a week?
Or maybe I should use methylene blue and do the same process?
Because from what I can tell my betta sorry they're getting fin rot or the fins are getting burned from ammonia.
I feed my baby does every other day. They get five to six pellets and I drop them in one time.
No extra food. I don't overfeed them and I'm constantly checking the plants for any dead leaves or roots.
Once a week I do water changes on alll my tanks.
I use a gravel vac. Every two weeks I do a full water change. I rinse out the filter sponge old water. How do you clean out the filter using the filter rush.
of course when I add water always a good dechlorinator and I and I plant food.
I can't think of anything else to do that would be needed.
I can get my male Bettas to live longer than 4 months.
I have two females that I bought immediately when they came in and I've had them for a year.
I guess that prevented them from getting sick
What do you do if you do not have access to cyled material? No local fish club, no local store just ordering everything online?
Wait a month, when the cycle is almost done, when grey cloudy water is finally crystal clear. This video kinda shows you what can you do if you start a 2nd aquarium, instead of waiting that much you can do it almost instant using your already cycled filters ornaments plants etc..
@@popacosmin5262 This will be the 1st tank in the house. Thanks anyway.
I wanted to know the same thing 😅 guess it’s not a good idea or not possible to quick start a new tank without a sponge etc
I just started without a used sponge. I got no other viable responses. I allowed my tank to run with treated water for 3 weeks before adding a bit of leaf zone. I let that run one more week before adding plants. 2 more weeks and I added my fish. They seem to be thriving and my guppies are breeding.
I have an established 20 gallon and just set up a 55 gallon. The 55 gallon has some of the original substrate but a new filter. I have 8 Panda corydoras in it and am worried they’ll fall ill. I have a few plants, a moss ball, and a plant from my established tank. I will use the sponge method today.... any encouraging words or advice? The people at the fish store said it would be fine but as I’m reading online, I’m increasingly worried about them.
as long as you watch parameters and dose seachem safe or prime accordingly you'll be fine
Good idea I did so many times it is working good
I know right? I'm glad it has worked for you too!
I’ve done it , I put decoration from a cycled tank , or use the filter from a cycled filter , I also used stability , the bacterial in bottle .... On 12 fish only one died .... surely some ammonia spike happened , but the beneficial bacterial did multiply so quicker that the ammonia spike lasted very shortly
Not to mention you've got a Marineland with the bio wheel so absolutely no need to worry about replacing that sponge.
The tanks sound so relaxing
What if it’s for my first aquarium so I don’t have any of this stuff? Also nice video
If it's your first aquarium you could ask a friend or you local fish store they have any cycled filter media
Otter Creek Aquatics thx!
How did you cut the round hole in the ceramic terracotta pot?
i did all of them and was wondering can i add shrimp the next day?
If I were you, I would test your water parameters and if the readings are safe for shrimp, go ahead! But only if the readings are good.
Thanks for the help
No problem!!!
Your fish are just gorgeous
Thank you so much!!!!
I agree 💯... thank you for sharing... the best so far...
My canister pump was left with a bit of water from the previous established setup, for about 4 months. There was still some water in it when I started my new aquarium, do you think it would still work? I mean it was maybe less than half a cup of water still in the canister filter, and the aquarium is 65 gallons.
It wouldn’t work, if you unplugged your pump for 4 months the bacteria in your filter have died because they need oxygen and moving bodies of water to stay alive and cultivate.
quick question. i have a fluval 207 canister filter on my aquarium that has being established for about 12months . my sister wants to get a little 40lt tank going and id like to start her off so my question is can i take the sponge filter from a aqueal fan 1 filter i have and put it in to the fluval canister for a cuple of weeks to get it loaded ??? look forward to reply thanks
Yes
Very Informative, great tips to help you get started up quickly.
Thank you! Yes, these methods have worked many times for me
What if there is a sponge in a well established tank that just keeps on sinking in the tank without a filter?Can we use that sponge in our new tank to instantly cycle the new tank?
I have an established tank, but the sponge was replaced only a few weeks ago. Will that sponge be good enough to start the new tank?
The bacteria on it are likely dead if its just been dried out.
Excellent advice!
Great video man!
Thanks man, looking forward to more of your videos!!
Otter Creek Aquatics thanks man! yea I just posted one today. And had one a couple days ago.
@@learningtofishkeep665 Wow dude!!! Just realized I wasn't even subbed to you, definitely thought I was!!! Got that taken care of!
Otter Creek Aquatics thanks man! No worries. Appreciate it! #fishfam
Iv just acquired my sisters fish tank after her fresh water fish died. It's filter has dried out cos it's been a week can I still use the spong to get my aquarium going. I already have to aquariums on the go which I love
Sadly I do not have an already established tank. I just bought a new 10 gallon setup. only 1 tank. Brand new along with a brand now HOB filter that came with filter media which includes a bio bag and a gel. My betta fish is sitting in his little cup. I had no choice but to set up a brand new tank as my old tank's filter just burnt out. So the only option I have is to do a quick cycle. So I am kind of stuck with trying to find options to do a quick cycle
Did you figure it out? I am in the same situation rn too lol
It depends on everything that's in the old tank. Does it have gravel, sand, decorations, drift wood, live plants? Everything in your tank will contain beneficial bacteria. So if you set up a new tank, take as much stuff from the older tank and put it in there. Even if there is a tiny bit of bacterial introduced to your new tank it will excel super quickly and from there be "cycled" for your betta
What's the situation? New tank, have betta, no other thanks?
Great to know. But, blink dude, please!
This does help me cause I am a new starter and I don't have beneficial bacteria. 🤔
He explained what to do if you are just starting up, if you have a friend that has an established aquarium, ask them for some used medium....or ask your local fish store to help out.
so u can ask friends for recycled filters or sponges or can ask a pet store for that or u can buy a new filter and ask if u can swap it out for a filter they were already using since that benefitial bacteria would alr have built up in their tanks so a new filter wouldn’t cause them any issues
What if I do this for shrimp (RCS)? I've just added the sponge filter gunk from an already established aquarium into a new 17G tank with a new sponge filter. I have not added any shrimp yet but was wondering when I can?? Do I have to feed the aquarium bacteria with some flake food until I add the shrimp or is the dirty sponge water enough?
Let some fish food sit in there for a few days, also add a few moss balls
The tank needs ammonia to feed the bacteria. Without any form of fish waste/ammonia the bacteria will eventually die off. It can only help if you add a little fish food to the tank so the bacteria can get the ammonia it needs to continue to grow.
Very helpful! Thank you!!
I just got a new tank. Thanks for the help. >)))o>
Truly fantastic tips....👍
If I have the exact Aqueon hang on back on the 29 just like you have , can you just use the filter cartridge to help establish a 75 gal ?
Yes, make sure the filter is good and mucky, don't rinse it off.
Yes, but one of the bad things about filter cartridges is the carbon inside. If you dont change it eventually it will leach stuff it had pulled out of the tank before back into the tank
Nice one, bud!
Thanks, buddy!
Great info!
Thank you!!!
Do U use fertilizer in those sponge filter aquariums?
How long does the filter need to be on the established tank before you can use it on the new tank?
What if I am just starting my first tank and I don’t have any other aquariums? I also don’t know anybody with established tanks I can use.
Do you have a local fish store? If so they will have some cycled filter media for you to use. If not the next best thing would be get some live plants and slowly feed your tank fish food as if there were fish in it. That will introduce ammonia and start your cycle
@@OtterCreekAquatics I will check out some local fish stores near me. Otherwise I will use the second method. Thank you!
There are a number of products that will instantly cycle your tank. I used “SafeStart” from Tetra (easily found on Amazon or your pet shop) that will add bacteria and cycle your tank. You can add fish minutes after adding the product.
@@94110mission you sure?
Nice upload. Lots of good information.
Thank you, sir!
Hello. So i am going to just dechlorinate my water ( 55 gallon tank) and then after 24hrs add two filters of an acclimated tank. Would that be okay ??
Its okay for a fresh setup, but its NOT okay to add fish until the nitrogen cycle has completed. Add a little fish food every 3 or 4 days to make ammonia, so nitrite will develop & then nitrates to take over. Nitrates is where you want to be (4-8 weeks) then you just need to do maintenance & weekly eater changes 👍😃
I’ve been using a product called Seachem Stability for awhile now. It’s worked great for me. Though it’s a little annoying having to keep purchasing every month or so. I’m afraid to stop using it for some reason though I’m sure there’s got to be enough beneficial bacteria in my tank after having my Oscar for nearly 2 years in it.
I've never used that product but I am aware of it. Do you have anything else in your Oscar tank? Substrate, Drift wood, plants, or is it just bare bottom and 2 sponge filters
Otter Creek Aquatics There’s is absolutely nothing in the tank other than the Oscar, 2 heaters, 2 sponges, and an air stone.
He destroys any plants that I try and add, and I fear that adding any substrate will trap waste and other things that I cannot see.
I’m not really a fan of that water vacuum thing.
I was going to say, if you have a bunch of other stuff in the tank you will have a lot of beneficial bacteria over all of it. Keep doing what you're doing if it's working, but don't be scared to take a risk
Otter Creek Aquatics Yeah your right. Maybe I should take more risks. Been wanting to decorate my tank for awhile now, time to show him who’s boss lol
@@calijay9805 I've never kept an Oscar so I'm not sure which plants you can keep, but my suggestion would be try some floating plants
Totally random question: what song is that at the opening? It’s been stuck in my head
"Where are you now"
Alan walker - faded
If I take gravel out of my 125g established tank and put it into my new 10 gallon tank (plan on putting in about 2 inches worth) will that cycle it enough to add about 7 mollies the same day?
I'm not 100% sure. Do you have any plants in your established tank, also are the mollies full grown?
@@OtterCreekAquatics no plants in the established tank. Mollies would just be the normal size you get at petsmart
Hello thank you for this explenation , i have a question for you i have a brand new fish tank i do have sponge filters extra with beneficial bacteria , i do also have other fishtanks and weekly water change because i have cichlids and one fishtank i have is big enough to fill up my new fishtank can i use the old water and put it in my new fishtank aswell ?
You should use fresh declorinated water
@@Peeyoosh-mq4lr alright cheers
@@Peeyoosh-mq4lr should I do water change during cycling process?will it break the cycle if I do so?
Another thing I do is I like to use any decor from an already established fish tank. If u have a bunch of tanks u can take a piece or two from each and boom u have bacteria spread thru out the tank as well.
I also use old filter pads like u mentioned.
Does that mean I could just put in fish and be okay?
It all depends on how many fish you are going to be adding honestly, and what size the fish are. Also, if you do any of these methods make sure you don't feed for a few days after adding the fish to avoid any ammonia spikes
Otter Creek Aquatics let’s say the ammonia spikes happen, (which will happen bevause I forgot to clear out some algae wafers in my tank and my bettas went after them, what steps should I prepare tomorrow morning or for the coming days ahead
DANKdaHERBALIST would you use wood that would be in your tank? Would that help to cycle? I’m upgrading my tank but I have to have my guppies live somewhere until the new tank is cycling.
Yes!!! Drift would would definitely kick start your cycle! What size tank and how many guppies?
Thx for the info
Hi, is it normal if my new tank water gets super dirty like dark brown after i squeeze old filter sponge into the tank? Will the water clear and is it harmful for the plants? Currently have no fish in tank. Advice would help!
Yes that is normal, and exactly what you are looking for!!! It's very beneficial for plants!!!
Otter Creek Aquatics thank you very much!
awesome fish!
Thank you!
I am trying this! I hope it works!!
Great video!
Thank you! I hope you got some value out of it!!! Are you setting up a new tank?
@@OtterCreekAquatics I have about 30 tanks and counting and use this method often. It has never failed me. A+++ video! :)
WOW!!! Thats amazing! What type of fish do you keep?
hi so i have a ten gallon but just got a 20, and have been told cycling takes about 2 months and uh... let's say i don't have that kind of time because the 20 gallon is sitting on my floor until i move my 10 gall onto my desk. i do have a dirty filter cartridge, but it's not a sponge so will it still work?? great video btw
xXArisaurXx same with me!!!
@@nataliemarquez2512 problem solved! I actually ordered some charcoal and put two medium sized pieces in the tank with water, I planted the crap out of the tank and used beneficial bacteria to start the tank. I waited about three days and then added some shrimp, waited two more days and then added the fish! I hope this helps :)
So effectively if I have a 300L tank, and upgrade it to a 600L tank shutting down the 300L and moving all of the substrate, filter media, decor will immediately have my tank cycled provided I don't kill the bacteria living on all of it with sticking fresh tap water all over it?
So my job has a fish tank, can I dip the filter into my tank at home to get that bacteria? I’m sorry I’m watching this at work with loud nap time music playing so I can’t really focus. But I want to know before I leave work lol
Yes you could do that. I would squeeze all of the filter material into your tank. Its gonna leave a mess but after a few days just vacuum out all the debris
Otter Creek Aquatics and how long after that should I wait to add fish?
What tank size and what fish are you wanting to get?
Otter Creek Aquatics it’s 10gal and I’m thinking tetras but not sure
Nice thank you m8!
Great help
Thank you...
The key centance i ear you say is ad a few fish ,and that really is the crucial part here.if one takes a bare aquarium and puts a floatingplant in there and one fish than that tank is cycled.if you put 20 fish in it it is not.on the other hand if you feed that one fish tons of food that it can not proces the tank wil not be cycled wereas if you dont feed that 20 fish for the first week and sifon out the waste they produce than that tank is also cycled.😊
How do you know it was an instant filter cycle.
The only way to know for sure is that you would have a good amount of nitrates not nitrites on your test strip.
Free to go through a cycle your tank will be breaking down the ammonia, that turns into nitrites and then you have a good amount of nitrates that is really not harmless to your fish
You won't have a reading of nitrates if you did not go through the cycle
I was told this method only works if you take the sponge from one hang on the back filter and you put it in another hang on back filter I was told just putting it in the water does not work.. it might give you some beneficial bacteria but not nearly as much if you put it in the new tank filter.
It won't give you the same amount of bacteria or not enough, but once the fish get in there and start creating ammonia the bacteria will rapidly grow to compensate. The goal is to just get the starter bacteria in the tank
Will bacteria from a freshwater tank filter work in a brackish tank?
How long before the NH3 disappears? Currently at around 0.25ppm with NO2 at
Yes. But brackish bacteria is slightly different. As time passes the bacteria will grow that lives in a brackish tank naturally. We had to do this on our puffer tank.
Hi and thanks for the thorough explanation. So I'm new to the hobby, gathering information at the moment, setting my aquarium in 2-3 weeks time. If I get some beneficial bacteria from someone's HOB filter, or a sponge filter or whatever, shouldn't I treat the water with meds or salt before I introduce any fish? Thanks for the help and best wishes to all.
I don't believe this is necessary, the meds and salt are great for medicating sick fish and a little aquarium salt would not do much harm but in my opinion, I don't think it is necessary to add them. The cycle is what you need to begin in your newly setup aquarium more emphasis should be placed on ways to get the cycle going rather than treating with medications unless you may be expecting sick fish of some sort. When I first started my tank no salt or meds were added just live bacteria and I was fully through the cycle a couple weeks after. Do monitor your fish's health though just in case you may need to add any meds in the future. Also, to note, it is wise to treat sick fish separately rather than all at once if the rest are ok.