I'm becoming addicted to water changes?

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
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To me, its all about clean, clean water. I have great filtration and 5-10 turnovers per hour in my tanks. I also powerfeed since 99% of my stock are juvie growouts. Fish thrive on clean water. I have well enough BB housed in my media so there is never a mini-cycle issue.

My fish love fresh water. They scour to the corners because of my python(s), but almost immediately after I pull the pythons out, they are swimming joyfully like they just won the lottery.

Imagine this, in the wild, fish have an infinite amount of turnover and clean beneficial water - constantly. And what you guys might even scoff at more is, once I get JK47's ass over to my place to setup my drip, it will be equivalent to DAILY 50% WC.

Actually in the wild, esp in lakes, the water isn't that clean(in a high school limnology class project, I monitored the water quality of a north florida lake by testing it)....Nitrate is certainly not zero and there were traces of NH3 and NO2 as well along with other interesting things. Most people's goal is after cycling, control nitrate to a decent level and also control PH to an acceptable level.
 
+1

Im lucky to do it bi-weekly and I never had issues. I am the opposite of addictive when it comes to water changes.. I can list things I am addictive too though.. I wouldnt wanna break MFK rules.

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This is what I do: I am an early riser of the household...twice a week

1) I put the hose attached to my eheim backflush port to the yard and turn on the port. I turn off the power heads
2) wash up, start to cook breakfast
3) 10-15 minutes later I turn off the port...add prime
4) I put my garden hose spray head to soak, turn on and leave it on
5) finish cooking breakfast, get my kid up
6) when the water splash sound diminish, I get back to the tank and watch it fill to my desired level, and turn off the hose and close my back yard door. Turn everything on

30 minutes, with only about 5 minutes of actual time involved in changing water.
 
I try doing 10% daily if I can or 15% every other day. The thing is there are a lot other things in the water we don't test for like hormones n such. My fish love water changes they swim in the water being poured in. Plus my red shoal are sloppy eaters
 
I do about 30-40% wc every week, and gravel vac about every 2 weeks. I'd like to do a little more since I have a cichlid grow out tank right now and I dont run carbon, so it would keep the water more clear. Parameters are good and fish aren't showing signs of stress though. I just don't see the need of doing 3 or more water changes a week.
 
I live by the old Army Corps of Engineers dictum of ....."The Solution to Pollution is Dilution"


Keep in mind that water changes provide much more than simply lowering the tanks nitrate levels, they also remove phosphates, pheromones and other chemicals that can build up between water changes, as well as introduce numerous minerals and trace elements that become depleted over time.

I think that some people forget some of water chemistry basics, when focusing on nitrates, and nitrate removers such as pothos. It's not quite that simplistic.

It is virtually impossible for one hobbyist to judge another when discussing water change amounts, or schedules, unless one is privy to each others exact set up, including overall bio load, filtration & filter maintenance schedule, tap water chemistry, species (and growth stage) of fish being kept, etc.
 
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