I promise I have read the sticky and read every post I can find about cycling with and without plants. I *think* I am doing what I should be doing and I *think* I have a grasp on this, but I wanted to confirm.
I'm doing a fishless, planted cycle in a 54 gallon tank. I took 1/3 of the media from each of two 10 gallon established tanks and also used a bottle of Dr. Tim's One and Only. The tank is moderately planted. I have a number of pretty fast growing plants that have visibly grown easily a couple of inches in the past week. I'm using PPS-Pro ferts and excel. I have a Finnex Ray 2 light strip along with just a shop light with a 6500k fluorescent bulb clipped to the back corner of the tank (it's a corner tank, so shaped like a slice of pie...mmm, pie...).
Tomorrow, I will be a week into the process. I'm using Dr. Tim's ammonia drops as my ammonia source and dosing to 3 ppm. I have been testing daily. After the first couple of days, it seems to be the trend that the plants/bacteria are taking care of about half the ammonia in a 24 hour period. I never got a nitrite reading at all, not even a blip on the test. Two nights ago, nitrate started showing at about 30ppm. Last night, no nitrite again, but nitrate was about 20ppm. I have not done any water changes. PH is a steady 7.4, temp is 78.
So - I'm thinking the nitrite spike happened between testing and quickly because of both the seeded media and the bottle o' bacteria. There are no nitrates in my tap water. I don't see any algae. I know both using bottled bacteria and cycling with plants throw off the whole traditional fishless cycle rules. I'm certainly not stocking the tank until it's taking care of that ammonia within 24 hours, but does it seem like I'm on the right track? I am dosing ferts according to the instructions. I am just trying to think if there is anything else that could be causing the nitrates rather than just the cycle is completing.
I'm doing a fishless, planted cycle in a 54 gallon tank. I took 1/3 of the media from each of two 10 gallon established tanks and also used a bottle of Dr. Tim's One and Only. The tank is moderately planted. I have a number of pretty fast growing plants that have visibly grown easily a couple of inches in the past week. I'm using PPS-Pro ferts and excel. I have a Finnex Ray 2 light strip along with just a shop light with a 6500k fluorescent bulb clipped to the back corner of the tank (it's a corner tank, so shaped like a slice of pie...mmm, pie...).
Tomorrow, I will be a week into the process. I'm using Dr. Tim's ammonia drops as my ammonia source and dosing to 3 ppm. I have been testing daily. After the first couple of days, it seems to be the trend that the plants/bacteria are taking care of about half the ammonia in a 24 hour period. I never got a nitrite reading at all, not even a blip on the test. Two nights ago, nitrate started showing at about 30ppm. Last night, no nitrite again, but nitrate was about 20ppm. I have not done any water changes. PH is a steady 7.4, temp is 78.
So - I'm thinking the nitrite spike happened between testing and quickly because of both the seeded media and the bottle o' bacteria. There are no nitrates in my tap water. I don't see any algae. I know both using bottled bacteria and cycling with plants throw off the whole traditional fishless cycle rules. I'm certainly not stocking the tank until it's taking care of that ammonia within 24 hours, but does it seem like I'm on the right track? I am dosing ferts according to the instructions. I am just trying to think if there is anything else that could be causing the nitrates rather than just the cycle is completing.