sueandherzoo
Active Member
I'm reading and reading and reading until my eyes cross and my head spins but I'm still not quite grasping the concept of the "cycle" process. I bought a 12-gallon Instant Ocean kit (it will become a quarantine tank in the winter - if I can successfully raise a fish or two in this small one and I'm as addicted as I think I will be then I'll upgrade to a 55 gallon) and I have a thin layer of live sand on the bottom, 5 pounds of base rock and 12 pounds of live rock. I have the light on and the pump and filter going and it all looks gorgeous and all water tests came back great. Of course it's only been 48 hours so I'm expecting it's going to do some spiking and peaking and then when it levels off again I will be good to go with a clean-up critter or two.
So while I'm being good and being patient I'm trying to envision in my head exactly what it is I'm waiting to happen. I know we want good bacteria to grow and I know we're trying to jump start that but why and how will good bacteria start to grow when there's nothing much in there? I don't expect a lot of die off - I bought live rock at the LFS and got it right in the tank. Can someone explain to me (in simple terms) what I'm waiting to happen? I've read about using damsels or ghost feeding or using a piece of raw shrimp and I guess that's to get bad stuff in the water so that it will encourage the good stuff to grow? I'm not sure why we WANT an ammonia spike.
Forgive me for asking about the very basics but I'm not good at just following instructions.... I need to understand WHY I'm doing something and how the process works. Right now I'm looking at the tank thinking "why would anything happen in there - there's nothing but water and rocks and stones running through a filter?"
Oh, that brings me to another question: should I take the carbon pack out while I'm doing the cycling? Do I want to get things clean or do I want them to get dirty?
I've got outdoor ponding down to a science with my mechanical filtration and biological filtration and skimmers and bogs and beneficial bacteria, etc. but this is throwing me.
Thanks in advance.
So while I'm being good and being patient I'm trying to envision in my head exactly what it is I'm waiting to happen. I know we want good bacteria to grow and I know we're trying to jump start that but why and how will good bacteria start to grow when there's nothing much in there? I don't expect a lot of die off - I bought live rock at the LFS and got it right in the tank. Can someone explain to me (in simple terms) what I'm waiting to happen? I've read about using damsels or ghost feeding or using a piece of raw shrimp and I guess that's to get bad stuff in the water so that it will encourage the good stuff to grow? I'm not sure why we WANT an ammonia spike.
Forgive me for asking about the very basics but I'm not good at just following instructions.... I need to understand WHY I'm doing something and how the process works. Right now I'm looking at the tank thinking "why would anything happen in there - there's nothing but water and rocks and stones running through a filter?"
Oh, that brings me to another question: should I take the carbon pack out while I'm doing the cycling? Do I want to get things clean or do I want them to get dirty?
I've got outdoor ponding down to a science with my mechanical filtration and biological filtration and skimmers and bogs and beneficial bacteria, etc. but this is throwing me.
Thanks in advance.