Quote:
Originally Posted by woofer00
Couple things:
1) Kind of curious why you'd bury the seed gravel. It seems like the seed gravel would better circulate by being directly in the path of of water flow than buried beneath it.
2) Why not take media from your established tank and stick it in the mini-filter or in the seed gravel media bag?
3) Flake food sort of works, but it breaks down unpredictably. Straight ammonia is more of a daily hassle, but the cycle will start and end much sooner.
4) Using old tank water really won't make a huge difference. The bulk of the bacteria you seek aren't hiding in the water, but on the media, gravel, and other surfaces.
5) The bacteria don't -need- heaters, but they -like- heaters. The bacteria are more active with heat than without, and will reproduce faster at higher temps, as long as you're not approaching their kill-temp. 74 should be plenty warm enough if that's the bare minimum, although a consistent 78-80 might be a few days faster.
Regardless of the points I just outlined, you'll cycle anyway, just might take a little longer.
|
1) I should have said half bury. I planned to lay it beside the mini filter and toss a little sand on top.
2) The mini-filter has floss in it, which is why I was thinking about using it.
3) I know the break down of food can help with the ammonia which is why I thought to use it. I have the bacteria suppliment as well.
4) The old tank water because it has already aged. I was thinking using water that has been used would be better than fresh.
5) I do have a spare heater that I can stick into the bucket. I just didn't want to get too fancy on trying to start the sand to cycle.
My whole point of trying to cycle the sand like this was to reduce stress on the fish and plants that are already in the tank. I have no other place to put the fish if I were to cycle in the tank and I don't want them in a bucket for long periods of time. Hence this idea.
Guess it won't hurt to try it anyways.