I just dirted my 20 high about 1 hour ago. I used Miracle-Gro Organic Choice dirt. I have my fish(5 Neon tetras and 4 emerald corys) in a 2.5 gallon bucket with a sponge filter in it and some fake plants. I am wondering when i can put the fish back in the tank? It is currentlty cloudy and some of the wood and dirt are floating i will clean those out. So my question is when can i put the fish back in the tank?
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normally you would want to cycle your tank if it does not have cycled media in the filter. If you do have cycled media and you've conditioned the water correctly, then you should be fine putting them back in BUT A WORD OF CAUTION! Do understand that if you simply throw dirt into a tank and cap it and fill, you WILL have a period of time that the dirt will leech lots of ammonia and nitrogenous nutrients into the water column potentially KILLING ALL YOUR FISH. If you do not have a filter that can handle that load you will, not potentially, WILL kill all your fish. It's happened here before and we hope you do not make the same mistake. have good filtration to take care of the ammonia from the dirt, and you MUST do water changes to deal with the spike in ammonia and nitrogenous nutrients.
ps How much dirt did you use and what cap did you use? Did you already plant your live plants and how many plants?
My filter is the Aqueon Quietflow 10(up to 20 gallons). It has been up and running for about a year now. I used about a 1 1/2 of dirt and about a 1 1/4 of gravel.
Add some fast growing stem plants. They are nutrient sponges and will sop up the nutrients in the water column that will cause algae and toxic water conditions.
hygrophila polysperma, hygrophila difformis, luwigia repens...
After 30 water changes. Thats the magic number, yea 30. I'd say about 30 25% water changes.
I never had a dirt tank, just gravel, what is the advantages with dirt? Just wondering.
constant uncontroled additions of plant and algae food ;)
dirt is basically naturally occuring dry ferts. w/ dirt you dont have to get liquid or dry ferts for ur tank because its already in the dirt. Incredibly cost effective and the only thing u might, MIGHT, need to dose is liquid co2
Add floating plants. These are the best plants for eating nitrogenous waste. The other way of ridding the water of waste is by simply changing the water - makes sense right?. Either way you'd better get the fish in the tank pretty soon because the conditions in the bucket are truly poisonous.
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