hi i am about to dirt my 55g i was wondering could i soak my dirt in a tub for a week changing to water often to eliminate the excess nutrient stage allowing me to add it to my tank when i am ready and being about to add my fish back in under a day????? Thanks for your reply's
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so its a bad idea as the dirt will lose nutrients and become less affective in plant growing? I cant tell if thats a good thing or a bad thing.
When u first fill a tank it takes about a week for the first set of spikes to start die down. Regardless of what else u have in the tank. My recomendation is to set it up turn oon ur filter and let it set for a week or more if u can. If not u should do large water changes at least every 3rd day.
I have a reply, why dirt a tank? I have been using a natural gravel about 5 inches deep in all my tanks for 40 years. ( The same gravel) I have plants by the bushel in there now, fish are reproducing like crazy, my water chemistry is spot on excellent, I have a HOB, a Marineland 503, a UV sterilizer, and under gravel filter with 2 power heads and everything works great and not a speck of dirt in there. The stories I read about how much trouble it is to dirt a tank makes gravel sound so much better to me. How would I vacuum the dirt without raising so much material into the water? With gravel, nothing is spread into the tank, it is sucked out. Maybe I am missing something but I have had tanks far longer than some of you have been alive. Clue me in.
The point of a dirted tant is so dat u can do plants =P An under-gravel filter and vacuming ur substrate isnt 4 plants alot ^.^
I have had plants in a gravel filled tank with an undergravel filter since I started having aqariums 40 years ago. My plants are doing great, To me dirt is just too much trouble. But that is just me.
I have 6 different plants in there now and they all seem to be doing well. I vacuum the tank every 2 weeks and do a water change then of about 75% in a 90 gallon tank. It is simple for me and if it weren't I would bother having a tank. It is just a large screen TV for our cat.
yes that will help, look up mineralized top soil its pretty much breaking down the nutrients into forms that are directly usable by the plants, main thing is that you dont really need to get the soil all that wet and also you need to introduce nitrifying bacteria such as those in your current tanks filter.
for my last couple dirted tanks I have soaked my dirt for up to 2 months prior. what I do is guesstimate how much I am going to use and put that into a 5 gallon pail. next time I do a water change ill sipon out some water from a cycled tank and stir it up get it nice and wet. not to wet but enough that you can take a hand full and squeeze water out. put a cover on it and let it sit check on it from time to time. you will see it start to bubble after a while. this mean that the "breaking down" process has begun. this will cut down on your ammonia spikes but if you value your fish by no means put them into the tank before 2 weeks. when I acclimated my fish it was a few at a time and after a week straight that the tank tested ok. be careful and test often. don't put your lights on full bore for a couple months until your plants start to really take off. this will prevent algae issues.
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