Want more tips and tricks to care for your fish? Check out these playlists! Best Fish Keeping Tips Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoDLeItfzOiRG8DV-1W9qNX4.html Lowering and Controlling Nitrates Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoD-pzZaHgtIFqurG9HZn2zz.html Every Live Stream is Here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoApHjaPfc6rdr7oipfEbZ-k.html The Water Change Tips & Tricks Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoCdEYkD0rQa0OWejFk5-bHD.html SunSun Canister Filter Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoCiMWEpBFJFJGxTqJH_MdMg.html Fluval Canister Filter Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoC8gSuqdG1c4nOzlAMFTmiD.html
I had a established tank of 15 yes grand child put stuff in tank had to do several small water changes tank will not regulate aits murky for 10 days won't clear
@@BenOchart hahaha I just did this today I didn't know my house wasnt in the bucket any more and put about 1/4th gallon on my carpet lol a lot of fish food and poop. I test the ph before and after a change. Now I watch the amount of water I take out I am trying to hit rid of all the ammonia but it stays at .25 same fore nitrate at .25 my tank hasn't finished cycling yet. But I only have 2 fish in it right now. I am going to get about 10 shrimp which will help get rid of a lot of poop and old food. And I think we are getting 4 more zebra danio. We had 3 total but one got killed by the leader of the danios and then my betta killed that mean danio with the help of the last good danio.
Hands down one of the best videos I've seen in almost ten years on here. This is they way all videos should be made. Thank you sir for not selling out and begging for subscriptions. Lol Fantastic content, no bush beating. Hats off.
So correct my friend!!! Great video...as I get older man its getting worse..I must sit and look at my tank or I will forget everything. Fish give me a CALMING feeling !!! Except when I have a senor moment
Just want to say thank you I was new to keeping an aquarium and by accidentally killed all 3 of my fish it was after a water-change and I couldn't figure out what I did wrong but you just told me exactly why everything went wrong and why I couldn't recover in time. from this I have decided to go into a in depth study before I get a new tank and decide to try again this was amazing and super helpful thanks again keep up the informative channel.
I'm very glad that you found this helpful Margaret and good luck with your new tank. If you're on FB, come join the "Ben O'Cichlid" group. There are some real helpful people there.
😂 any fish in that tank ^^^ is not getting clean pristine water ,look up father fish on TH-cam .with a natural aquarium you will never have to clean your tank once maybe fill the top due to evaporation,father fish has had a fish tank for 20plus years no water changes no cleaning and it’s full of life 😂 I laugh at these videos man .
Awesome video! It was less like being told a list of mistakes you could make during water changes, and more like having a conversation with an old friend!
Number 5 is a great point that most of us don't consider. Lost a fish last week from aggression day after a water change. Now I know why. They were in spawning mode. Great explanation.
I try to observe for a while immediately after a water change. It can get interesting with males doing breeding dances with each other and other fish trying to clear fish out of area to make a nest. A little less when I do a 20% change instead of a 50%. Thanks for stopping by Susan and supporting the channel. I notice 😀
All good points! Years ago, helped a friend do a water change on her big tank. After a couple glasses of wine, I mentioned the water felt prickly. She couldn't figure out why either. Then it dawned on us! Electrical cord was hanging in the water in the back... I was being electrocuted ever so slightly! I don't drink anything anymore when i do a water change. 🤣
Great video. I've never encountered 4 of these disasters. However, forgetting to pretreat the water is something I've done on more than one occasion. That is definitely a biggie for me.
@@BenOchart I'm here because of this. I changed out 50 percent of the water this time since the water was so filthy it was yellow, it's a 55+ gallon tank. The 3 fish I have sunk to the bottom and started hyperventilating in a huddled group, fins down, minimal movement. I dropped several tablets of Jungle:Ammonia Clear in the tank and 2 hours later things haven't changed. Another hour or so later and I dropped them in a 5 gallon Jungle:Ammonia Clear fizz tab treated solution of their current water+spring bottled+boiled tap. Long story short, they're moving and swimming around normally again but they're still hyperventilating for the most part. Googling the situation turned up fruitless as it seems no one has experience with nursing fish back to help after ammonia poisoning. They're big goldfish, all at least 6inches, and I'd really love to see them make it out of this.
I loved you wonderful comments on this perfect water change attitude. Thank you for your wonderful contributions to help others learn more about keeping their Aquarium in perfect condition.
Great video.. I used to keep fish many years ago and never had these problems. 15 years down the line I got a tank for my son and he wasn’t interested. So now it’s become my mini obsession 😆. I made this mistake and had a spike in deaths and lost quite a few fish. Straight to the point and very informative. Appreciate your time. Thanks and subbed
Great video!!! A lot of common sense. I do the same, connecting tap water directly to the tank, but something critical I do is turn off filtration x 30-45 min and turn on a little pump (inside tank) to mix well and rapidly the prime with the new tap water accelerating the dechlorination time and reducing the negative impact to the bacterial load. Never had problems. 4 years in the hobby.
Hi Ben. My biggest problem is adding to much of things As everything shows how much for 50 gallons and I have all 10 gallons so for me it’s trying to get the right amount of prime or meds etc. great video as usual,get to see some of the beautiful colors on the 🐠 👍👏🏼
Great video. For me having treated water setup the day before and adding a heater to match the tank temp are essential. Using 32 or 64 gallon receptacles on wheels makes moving from room to room quite easy then simply pumping the water back into the tanks with a small to moderate power head has saved more than half the time to do my water changes. Additionally I use a DIY water changer to pump the tank water out to my garden or into the wash and for 10 tears now I have never lifted a bucket.
Great Vid Ben!!! It happens to all...I learned a lot long ago when I had a salt water tank! I took that into the cichlid tanks and haven't lost any since unless it got bullied and taken out...I have a 55 gallon drum with a heater and powerhead. I prepare my water the day before, usually on Saturday cause I do my water changes on Sunday. I fill it with tap water, live in the city...treat it and add the trace, safe, buffer and it's ready for my change the next day!!! Only takes me 1\2 hour to make and I run it overnight and it's perfect conditions to avoid shocks...Even though I flooded several times filling the drum....lol.....It's been a fish changer ever since!!!! Hope this helps others!! Thanks again!!!
Nice video ! All points are on straight. In my experience I would also add: the release of gas pockets that are created inside the gravel or sand by decomposing food or organic material. When vacuuming the gravel or sand that gas can get release into the water column. Sometimes fish can get poisoned by that. In my tanks, I tend to decore with rocks, and lately I have decided to avoid rocks because uneaten food gets trapped in between. And when I move them to vacuum, those uneaten food and poop get out on the water and I can’t avoid fish to go for them as food. I have lost some fish because of that
Just subbed! I use to collect Cichlids back in 1983-1988. Had a 55 gallon tank with dual filtration. Always used a mini 10 gallon tank when changing water. Makes it easy to introduce fish back into the water and it gave me a chance to have water checked. Back in the day you had to take water samples to a pet shop where I lived in east Orange NJ. I loved this hobby, going to be starting a 30 gallon tank for my 2 grandbabies. I always looked at water changes as to jumping into a cold shower. Very uncomfortable and I wouldn't want the fish to be uncomfortable. Never had any issues. Thanks for the channel and will soon be starting my own. Something I also llearned was to have filters plugged into 2 different wall outlets if you can. Just a precaution if one gets unplugged. Same for the heaters when needed.
Well, not drinking too much is good advice during a water change, right up there with "Never take a sleeping pill and a laxative at the same time." LOL! Thanks for watching.
Good one, this should be posted on all forums across the globe. Fish dying? Question 1, is usually. How long have your tank been running. Under 1month - cycle. Above? Q2 Temp? Ph? Well/city water - additivs. Q3 recently sick fish/newly added fish? Q4 filter, sump? Cleaned it recently? How, with what. Rarely needed to ask more.
You got me on the first one. ADHD + PWC = Flood I’ve forgotten to unplug stuff and also forgotten to plug back in. I only forgot the dechlorinater once and remembered within 10 minutes so okay thank goodness 😅 Great video as always 👍
Yep I've forgot to add it to my water once too. It was also about 10 minutes but I felt so bad. I've been guilty of over cleaning. Had a 10 gallon tank given to me and thought how hard could this be? Ha! My first water changei tore the whole thing down and scrubbed everything. Even changed the filters. I had no test strips nothing. I could tell they werent happy so I took about 30% of the water out every other day until they acted right again. Those poor little guppies! One even got a horribly curved spine but still loved 2 years! No idea how! I feel like a noobie again because I'm adding rooted plants, mystery snails and 6 sakura cherry shrimp. I'm so lost with which fertilizers are safe for them and the plants and no more carbon in my filter. I feel so bad of and when they die on me because I know it's something I did
You know, I have a tank ordered but the more I research all this, the more "afraid" I get with what can go wrong and more importantly, I don't know if I want to put this much work into the whole process! Lots of thinking to do here---your video was important for that too! Thank you.
I rinse out detritus out of filter pads out occasionally when doing water changes but mostly don't and just replace media once it's exchausted it's effectiveness. I stand water in buckets and boil water from the cold tap and not hot tap as bad bacteria in the emersion tank kills fish. Never rinse pads with flowing or still tap water because of chlorine and chloramine and metals added to the water for our consumption.
All good lessons Ben. I plan on running my water through a charcoal reactor during water changes when I get my 200G up and running this summer. Hopefully that will take care of any surprises from the water company. Will pay attention to these lessons. Thanks Ben 👍
Thanks for the video. I have an additional question. When you say treat for the entire volume, do you mean that even when you are only doing a partial water change, say 20% water change in a 5 gallon tank, you still put enough drops into your tank to treat the full volume of 5 gallons even though it's a partial water change? Thanks for any help you can give.
Each brand of conditioner lists recommended instructions. If going from tap to tank you would usually treat for the full volume of the tank (not just for the amount replaced). When refilling from something like a bucket, you can just treat the water in the bucket before adding.
It seems the bucket method is not subject to any of these issues except perhaps the municipal water supply chemicals being added. A self contained and premixed auto top off system can even smooth out the water supply chemic issue since it trickles water in preventing shock.
I think a common mistake among beginners(as you said, ask me how I know lol) is doing too big of a water change(75%+) --- when you find an ammonia spike, pH crash, or your nitrates get out of hand so, as a newbie, you freak out and decide to replace all of the water or most of it thinking you're doing the right thing. Instead, the dramatic swing can kill them off. Happened to me and I can honestly say I thought I was trying to save them but ended up losing several fish. It was heartbreaking but, I learned my lesson! I think this would fall under your "shock" category. Just remember that when this happens, slowly acclimate your water back to normal.
Unfortunately Aaron this is the "school of hard knocks" so many of us continue to attend (I don't thing fish keepers ever "graduate", LOL!). Thanks for watching.
I do my refills from a roof filled rain barrel with a sump pump hooked up to a garden hose. never had a problem, except maybe the flood caused by too much beer.
I just want to thank you for this post. I suffered a reality check about city water maintenance back in May. I was not aware they were flooding the system with water treatment, and it happened to be my weekly water change. I had treated as normal with a water conditioner, but there was chlorine overload. I lost most of my fish in my 40-gallon, 10-gallon, and six gallon QT. I treated the survivors for about 7 days with melafix due to damaged fins. Remarkably, 5 fish survived but succumbed to death weeks later. From that day forward, i NOW have 2 five gallons, 1 -3.5 gallons, and three 2.5 gallon buckets of water lining my bathtub, with air stones and 5 heaters running constantly. They sit for no less than 24 hours. I had just gotten the tanks cycled and had to start all over. Good bacteria were obliverated by the high consentration of chlorine/chloramine. I have had no losses due to this issue since then. My husband also added a filtration system for me to help eliminate chlorine. But i will always test my water after that trauma. Then, last night, I made one of my personal biggest mistakes when replacing my American Flag from quarantine for fin rot and treatment, back into his tank. I did not acclimate him back to his normal environment. I knew as soon as I put him in his tank that I had just made the most stupid mistake EVER. He instantly went into shock. He couldn't get his balance. He was running into things. my heart sunk. But something amazing happened. His female partner continuously stayed by his side. Uprighting him. Gently nudging him when he started to swim sideways. I was pleasantly surprised he had survived the night. His mate literally kept him moving. He had plenty of air moving in the tank - his survival from this is yet to be seen. BUT I gotta say, a mistake like that gets the heart rate up because you can't undo the damage. Your post reminded me to slow down and think before doing IT. Whatever "IT" may be. I was contemplating euthanasia. But I have hope. He looks more comfortable now. "Just keep swimming!!"- Tracy
I do all my WC's on the same day. I pretest the tap water for total chlorine and ammonia. This catches the days when the water company bombs the water with chlorine and chloramine. Takes less than 3 minutes using test strips. Economical, practical and an insurance policy against a disaster. Great video btw
Totally agree. Here lately our water out of the tap has been showing 3.0- 4.0ppm ammonia on API test kit. I test tap water before every water change to help me determine my Safe dosage for my water changes.
Hi Ben, you're right as we get older we do get more distracted with things like watching the fish or just relaxing for a minute while things are going on. I've gotten to the point now where I built myself a overflow alarm out of a smoke alarm with two wires attached to the test button one on the terminal on either side started to the back of it strip the wires back keep them to the floor directly under the tank or in the sum area of your cabinet then when your water overflows you at least have an audible alarm before it flooded the entire house.
Hi Ben, great video. Yes you do need to concentrate on what your doing when doing water changes. I'm a bucket guy. Can I please ask what species of fish is that blue one you have with the white lips ? Stunning fish.
I can only thank you fir the tips. I am new to this and I've noticed that my little catfish boys are getting a beating from a larger fish. Constant chase etc. I've wondered what I can do then my " genius mind told me to make a water change. I did. Then kind of all bigger fishes( I have like 5 species known to get well together) acted pretty strong toward eachother. I've turned off the lights then and put a wave maker in it. They've seemed to calm down after. I am very curious to find a video on the aggression of the fish towards others. Thanks again for your input. I've grown a little by hearing this
Nice video at some point of keeping fish you will have water on the floor. What I’ve found is to have at least 2 power strips 1 for lighting with timers and cabinet lights and other for pumps,power heads,heaters,anything you want off when doing water changes so all you have to do is turn off switch and turn back on no unplugging anything and of course their high up so water doesn’t drip in them
Hey Ben thank you for the info how many african cichlids can i have in a 75 gallon and also what lighting is best. I have a black sand with black background
Though I am just a few days into the hobby, I feel that during water change we should not try to bathe the fish (they are always in bath) and we shouldn’t try to create a tidal wave. It’s your hobby take your time and enjoy each process longer.
When I do a water change, and i'm not vacuuming I run my line to my washer drain line. Well I forgot to put the washer drain pipe back into the drain behind the washer and well......Did a load of cloths and it was bad. 99% of mistakes come from getting sidetracked like you said.
Good point on aggression bumping during major water change / tank mod. The overflow/overfill I finally got under control with a Watchdog water detecter i fabbed a moint for in my sump. Major stress factor alleviated for under $20. Next I want to look at installing an auto shutoff for the pump.
2 weeks ago I started a big project of combining 2-20 gallon aquariums, 1-10 gallon and 1-5 gallon into a 60 gallon. I went the cautious route and acclimated all my plants,bacteria,shrimp and fish over a 12 hour period. By the end of it, I was exhausted and wasn't paying as much attention as I should have. Long story short, I flooded small areas of my living room 3 times that night. No alcohol was involved but I thought that night would be a great night to start drinking.😀 You gave some great advice.
Yr video showed up at the right time. i just stared up my new 36 gal tank 2.5 weeks ago and i am researching everything i can to give them the best life i can. its been 16 yesrs since i ve had a tank. i did a water change last night. it was my third one so far but it is the first time i mess up, and listening to u I did many things wrong and three of my babies die right then and there. i c now i under treated the water and i did not add stree coat thinking they did not need it..water temp was good i used an electronic one pretty good. was not in a hurry. right now i have all the time i need to spoil them and do things right. thank you very much for helping me understand the extra things that could happen. i will be looking out for those things as well. have a great night.
The flood, yep. Half an hour later I made a super simple water level alarm with a computer motherboard tweeter I put on the rim of the bucket in which I siphon the tank water.
i put in an overflow hose on my Sump that drains to a basement drain so it prevents problems of water change shocking fish. i have a little refrigerator hose drip water in sump to add fresh water and occasionally add a jug of water with some ph. stabilizer so it only gets tiny water changes. have not changed water in many years.
Great video! I'm guilty of a few of these disasters 😱. I try to get into a Zen state of mind and only focus on the tank. I've found that multitasking just doesn't work with fish keeping (at least for me)! Question. When treating the whole tank with Prime using python water changer, does the Prime have enough time to detoxify any toxic metals in the tap water (or from old copper pipes)? Is the reaction instantaneous as with chlorine and ammonia?
I believe that it is instant (and I add it at the area where the water is entering the tank). Never had a reaction after a water change doing it that way.
My fish love their water changes, I can pretty much guarantee spawning a couple of days after one, it amazes me the number of people that don’t dechlorinate their water, a colleague at work asked my why his tank always went cloudy and the fish were sick after he changes the water, turns out he was filling straight from the tap with nothing to make the water safe, it’s not just the fish that are affected by chlorine the beneficial bacteria is too, ever since he’s been treating the water and had no problems.
7205buttas yes, as I said many people do, chlorine and heavy metals wouldn’t alter you PH, nitrate, ammonia so won’t show if you tested afterwards, I guess it also depends on the percentage of the change, 10 or 20% and the affect is reduced compared to a 50, 60 or even as with the guy I mentioned 70% water change. Chlorine even in small amounts will give your fish chemical burns and will kill bacteria, after all that’s why they add it to tap water, for the cost and time associated with conditioning the water it’s a very small act that will benefit your fish. Think of it like this, not everyone used their seatbelt, they may say they don’t need to as they’ve never had a crash but one day they will, it’s not worth the risk for a moment of extra effort. 😉
Jeff Harris I have a 90 gallon and have the “python water changer” it would take me forever to treat my water for a water change and be 5x the work. I tend to do about a 30% change weekly. I can prob go 2-3 weeks as I have a lot if plants but I just like to do them before anything builds up. Also have 2 canister filter that I don’t touch on the days if water changes to make sure I don’t mess up too much of my bacteria and throw my tank into shock. I clean 1 filter out a month, so essentially I clean out my canisters every 2 months.
7205buttas sweet, you could add prime to the tank by simply dispersing it across the surface before you start refilling, the process of filling back up will mix it through and neutralise the chlorine 😉
Jeff Harris I guess but considering I have a 90g with 2 canister filters that prob hold like another 4 gallons each I prob have around 90g 4-95 gallons total when you take the rocks and decorations into account. Only changing about 25-30 gallons out a week isn’t really gonna harm the fish. Also have 2 power heads so the water mixes up pretty good and I never take it down low enough to have to swap the filters out. I also don’t really vacuum the gravel I just use the power heads to get the detritus kicked up and suck up as much of it out as I can and let the filters do the job on the rest
Only (so far) issue I have had was a bucket with a small hole in it. Left the old water sitting on the carpet too long. Was using separate bucket to fill tank at room temperature. Was not happy
Just dont change more then 30 percent of the tank water and use Prime conditioner. Make sure you let your water run for at least 5 to 10 minutes before adding fresh water from tap. Siphon your substrate only once a month and never clean your filter at the same time you do a water change. Wait at least two weeks, then clean your filter. Follow all of this and you will be perfectly fine.
@Apollyon 2 I would only change about 15 to 20 percent of the water in your 10 gallon. I would do a water change more frequently on such a small tank. Maybe every three to four days. You can siphon it while you take out the water, but I would not clean or change the filter media at the same time you do a water change. By changing the water and cleaning your filter it would only crash your tank and wipe out the beneficial bacteria your fish depend on. Yes, add your condition after you do the water change. Just make sure you allow your tap to run for at least 5 to 10 minutes before adding fresh water. Do this and you should be good to go.
@Apollyon 2 dont listen to this idiot you do not have to clean the tank every 3 to 4 days that's bullshit especially with very little fish I clean it every month and a half it's a 10 gal and the water is mostly crystal clear unless I stir up the bottem and when I clean it I do a 90 percent water change and change the media and leave 10 percent of the water for beneficial bacteria after 3 hours of the water running in the tank I put all the fish back
Wild G4MING What? A 90 percent water change isn’t good. And you take out the fish when you do a water change? You’re are wrong, not the other person. There is no beneficial bacteria in water. Research before talking crap.
I use Soil and sand from the beach Then some water plants that use the soil and the fish waste grow and the sand also somehow keeps it clean My tank is clear and has always been
2:30 Those Cichlids are beautiful! Here is something that I heard of... Someone was using a bucket to add water to their 125 gallon tank and they rested the bucket on the rim of the tank and the tank shattered.
Hey, I really enjoy your channel btw! I have a question, I use containers to add water to my 30-gallon tank after a water change when can I add the water conditioner? i have been adding a little with each container but in doing that my measurements aren't really accurate, can I add after I fill the tank without the chlorine hurting my fish?
With smaller tanks, 55 and lower I am very paranoid about matching new water temperature to tank water and often will gravel vac with the Python but bucket fill so I can get the temperature exact.
Something I do which I think helps my cichlids is, I skip feeding my fish for a day after a water change. I think it gives the good bacteria time to build up and reduces the ammonia spike in the tank
What you can also do is add bacteria starter of any brand. Make sure though it's the right bacteria. Anaerobic and aerobic bacteria - The one that are used in the nitrogen cycle. But don't get the bacteria that's used to break down uneaten food & debris in your aquarium. Sinead the bottle.
I have done the overflow on my 125 tank a few times years ago when I had three young kids and often their friends running around. I like to refill slowly so I can monitor the water temperature and my mind wanders while slowly refilling.
Fortunately for me, our whole house is rain water collection with sophisticated Germain filtering/UV light and pre-filtration. So in effect, a total RODI System. If anything I have to add minerals to my tank water like you would a shrimp tank. I've never even tested any ammonia/nor any trites/trates...ever. My tank is now well established.
I put music on & don't look at anything just aquarium work. 25% every two weeks same temp / little aquarium salt / Prime conditioner..am good 10 yrs 90 gal / 2 hob filters & air Stone 25 tiger barbs few small cats & all good ...Good infro
I have only been guilty of flooding the floor (many times in the house, countless times in the garage) and draining too much water (99%-twice) in my aquariums. I have also forgotten to plug the filter back in. (holy hydrogen sulfide, Batman)
WOW Ben. You answered a big question I always had. I have a 29gal Aqueon kit tank and it came with a water conditioner specifically for tap water. I always added the conditioner according to the amount I'm changing (half dose of conditioner to 1/2 water change)But you are saying add conditioner for the full 29 gallons? Thanks!!!
Ammonia is the biggest problem with water changes because it's regularly used by water departments across the country...you would see it more in the winter than summer but they do add it so be careful. Ben the stir up is real...water changes change the make up of the tank and the temperature usually changes with the water change...I had this happen yesterday and the temp of my tank went up from 79 to 83 after doing a 40% change...it definitely caused a "stir" and several fish became more aggressive for a few hours.
Gurvinder Parmar Ammonia in the water. I doubt it’s even safe for humans 🤔 My venustus went after my polystigma real hard after a water change. Thanks for watching Gurvinder 😀👍🏻
@@BenOchart Yes, as crazy as it sounds, they do treat water with ammonia along with chlorine.....I think the sudden temp change is also a big factor in their sudden aggression...cichlids in the wild generally mate in warmer seasons so I think that is a trigger...but in my tank, the water changes don't come every week like they used to in the past. So now, when that change comes, I think it affects them more because they aren't used to it.
Want more tips and tricks to care for your fish? Check out these playlists!
Best Fish Keeping Tips Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoDLeItfzOiRG8DV-1W9qNX4.html
Lowering and Controlling Nitrates Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoD-pzZaHgtIFqurG9HZn2zz.html
Every Live Stream is Here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoApHjaPfc6rdr7oipfEbZ-k.html
The Water Change Tips & Tricks Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoCdEYkD0rQa0OWejFk5-bHD.html
SunSun Canister Filter Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoCiMWEpBFJFJGxTqJH_MdMg.html
Fluval Canister Filter Playlist is here: th-cam.com/play/PLr8ew8o8WXoC8gSuqdG1c4nOzlAMFTmiD.html
You forgot exploding heaters :-)
@@nospoon4799 True, that's a good one.
I had a established tank of 15 yes grand child put stuff in tank had to do several small water changes tank will not regulate aits murky for 10 days won't clear
Hilarious. It’s like you’ve been sitting by my tank watching me mess up.
We've all made some of these mistakes along the way. Thanks for watching.
@@BenOchart hahaha I just did this today I didn't know my house wasnt in the bucket any more and put about 1/4th gallon on my carpet lol a lot of fish food and poop. I test the ph before and after a change. Now I watch the amount of water I take out I am trying to hit rid of all the ammonia but it stays at .25 same fore nitrate at .25 my tank hasn't finished cycling yet. But I only have 2 fish in it right now. I am going to get about 10 shrimp which will help get rid of a lot of poop and old food. And I think we are getting 4 more zebra danio. We had 3 total but one got killed by the leader of the danios and then my betta killed that mean danio with the help of the last good danio.
I haven't overfilled a tank before, been in the hobby for 2yrs. But ive done the opposite, flooded my bucket 🤦♀️
Yup, me too. I looked away for what seemed like a second ...
@@BenOchart thats why i fill mine up in the shower lol.
I just stick the hose out my window and let it rain down on my neighbors car
@@skeetskeet4554 lmao
Same
Doing a water change is the best part of the hobby, it's the Bob Ross part of the hobby! Happy little plant here happy little fish here..
So true!
Hands down one of the best videos I've seen in almost ten years on here. This is they way all videos should be made. Thank you sir for not selling out and begging for subscriptions. Lol Fantastic content, no bush beating. Hats off.
So correct my friend!!! Great video...as I get older man its getting worse..I must sit and look at my tank or I will forget everything. Fish give me a CALMING feeling !!! Except when I have a senor moment
Lito Loco 4 Fish I’m right there with you 😀
Just want to say thank you I was new to keeping an aquarium and by accidentally killed all 3 of my fish it was after a water-change and I couldn't figure out what I did wrong but you just told me exactly why everything went wrong and why I couldn't recover in time. from this I have decided to go into a in depth study before I get a new tank and decide to try again this was amazing and super helpful thanks again keep up the informative channel.
I'm very glad that you found this helpful Margaret and good luck with your new tank. If you're on FB, come join the "Ben O'Cichlid" group. There are some real helpful people there.
😂 any fish in that tank ^^^ is not getting clean pristine water ,look up father fish on TH-cam .with a natural aquarium you will never have to clean your tank once maybe fill the top due to evaporation,father fish has had a fish tank for 20plus years no water changes no cleaning and it’s full of life 😂 I laugh at these videos man .
Awesome video! It was less like being told a list of mistakes you could make during water changes, and more like having a conversation with an old friend!
I like that a lot. Thank you!
Number 5 is a great point that most of us don't consider. Lost a fish last week from aggression day after a water change. Now I know why. They were in spawning mode. Great explanation.
I try to observe for a while immediately after a water change. It can get interesting with males doing breeding dances with each other and other fish trying to clear fish out of area to make a nest. A little less when I do a 20% change instead of a 50%. Thanks for stopping by Susan and supporting the channel. I notice 😀
All good points!
Years ago, helped a friend do a water change on her big tank. After a couple glasses of wine, I mentioned the water felt prickly. She couldn't figure out why either. Then it dawned on us! Electrical cord was hanging in the water in the back... I was being electrocuted ever so slightly! I don't drink anything anymore when i do a water change. 🤣
Ouch!
Jesus take wheel lol!🤣
@@elayshobeycurrey9496 😂🤣 I drink only lemon water now, haha
@@aquadesignsbymlt4769 good to know sis🤣😇
Oh no! ROFL
Thank you for this info ! I've learnt some hard lessons, also nice to see I'm on track with my changes.
Another good vid,My water change formula is 1-12 oz beer per ten gallons,be sure to check PH,Amonnia,Nitrite and BAC levels.!!!!!
LOL! "1 - 12 oz beer per ten..." LOL!
😂😂🤦♀️👍👍 that’s 12 for me🤪 *overflows tank while drunk on the floor
I love that slow mode feature!!!!
Great video. I've never encountered 4 of these disasters. However, forgetting to pretreat the water is something I've done on more than one occasion. That is definitely a biggie for me.
Denise Pollitt same here
Very easy to get distracted and forget.
@@BenOchart I'm here because of this. I changed out 50 percent of the water this time since the water was so filthy it was yellow, it's a 55+ gallon tank.
The 3 fish I have sunk to the bottom and started hyperventilating in a huddled group, fins down, minimal movement.
I dropped several tablets of Jungle:Ammonia Clear in the tank and 2 hours later things haven't changed. Another hour or so later and I dropped them in a 5 gallon Jungle:Ammonia Clear fizz tab treated solution of their current water+spring bottled+boiled tap. Long story short, they're moving and swimming around normally again but they're still hyperventilating for the most part. Googling the situation turned up fruitless as it seems no one has experience with nursing fish back to help after ammonia poisoning. They're big goldfish, all at least 6inches, and I'd really love to see them make it out of this.
I loved you wonderful comments on this perfect water change attitude. Thank you for your wonderful contributions to help others learn more about keeping their Aquarium in perfect condition.
Great video.. I used to keep fish many years ago and never had these problems. 15 years down the line I got a tank for my son and he wasn’t interested. So now it’s become my mini obsession 😆. I made this mistake and had a spike in deaths and lost quite a few fish. Straight to the point and very informative. Appreciate your time. Thanks and subbed
Wow. #5 I can definitely say that is true. I have seen this happen after every water change.
excellent video Ben. will be sure to add myself to the fb discussion page for sure
very good discussion of the dangers of water changes
Great video!!! A lot of common sense. I do the same, connecting tap water directly to the tank, but something critical I do is turn off filtration x 30-45 min and turn on a little pump (inside tank) to mix well and rapidly the prime with the new tap water accelerating the dechlorination time and reducing the negative impact to the bacterial load. Never had problems. 4 years in the hobby.
Hey, if it's working, then it's the right thing to do. I usually let my filters run (as long as the water line isn't too low.
Superb. I learned lot from you like bacteria disaster and now mistake during water change 💕💕
Hi Ben. My biggest problem is adding to much of things As everything shows how much for 50 gallons and I have all 10 gallons so for me it’s trying to get the right amount of prime or meds etc. great video as usual,get to see some of the beautiful colors on the 🐠 👍👏🏼
I hear you. Fortunately with most of those formulas you can be over a bit and it doesn't matter.
Thank you 😄
I always treat the water.
I always leave my Fluval FX6 on, I never switch it off.
Great video Sir.
Have a nice day.
Im so glad i have clean water where i live n dont have to treat it.
How often do you clean the filter? I have one
i glad i am not the only one that flooded the house,thanks for the info
There's some comfort in knowing that we're not alone ...
Very true! You nailed it Gangstah Ben!
“Gangstah”🤣🤣🤣
@@BenOchart It's so nice of you to actually take the time to read AND respond to quite a few of your followers.
All 5 are certainly true & everyone of us have experienced one of these Disasters.
I haven’t experienced any of them yet, but I haven’t even been in the hobby for 3 months yet
@@gabriellondon5882 Good luck!!!
Great video. For me having treated water setup the day before and adding a heater to match the tank temp are essential. Using 32 or 64 gallon receptacles on wheels makes moving from room to room quite easy then simply pumping the water back into the tanks with a small to moderate power head has saved more than half the time to do my water changes. Additionally I use a DIY water changer to pump the tank water out to my garden or into the wash and for 10 tears now I have never lifted a bucket.
That's awesome. If I was still using buckets I'd have 24/7 back pain.
Great Vid Ben!!! It happens to all...I learned a lot long ago when I had a salt water tank! I took that into the cichlid tanks and haven't lost any since unless it got bullied and taken out...I have a 55 gallon drum with a heater and powerhead. I prepare my water the day before, usually on Saturday cause I do my water changes on Sunday. I fill it with tap water, live in the city...treat it and add the trace, safe, buffer and it's ready for my change the next day!!! Only takes me 1\2 hour to make and I run it overnight and it's perfect conditions to avoid shocks...Even though I flooded several times filling the drum....lol.....It's been a fish changer ever since!!!! Hope this helps others!! Thanks again!!!
Sounds like a great system Emilio!
Do I need three trace, safe and buffer?
Wow, thanks 🌊🌿🌡⚡️☯️☮️🧘♀️😊
Nice video ! All points are on straight.
In my experience I would also add: the release of gas pockets that are created inside the gravel or sand by decomposing food or organic material. When vacuuming the gravel or sand that gas can get release into the water column. Sometimes fish can get poisoned by that.
In my tanks, I tend to decore with rocks, and lately I have decided to avoid rocks because uneaten food gets trapped in between. And when I move them to vacuum, those uneaten food and poop get out on the water and I can’t avoid fish to go for them as food. I have lost some fish because of that
True. It amazes me when I lift rocks just how much waste has worked its way under there. Doesn't seem possible but there it is. Thanks for watching!
Thanks great info for new fishkeeprs
You are welcome!
Just subbed! I use to collect Cichlids back in 1983-1988. Had a 55 gallon tank with dual filtration. Always used a mini 10 gallon tank when changing water. Makes it easy to introduce fish back into the water and it gave me a chance to have water checked. Back in the day you had to take water samples to a pet shop where I lived in east Orange NJ. I loved this hobby, going to be starting a 30 gallon tank for my 2 grandbabies. I always looked at water changes as to jumping into a cold shower. Very uncomfortable and I wouldn't want the fish to be uncomfortable. Never had any issues. Thanks for the channel and will soon be starting my own. Something I also llearned was to have filters plugged into 2 different wall outlets if you can. Just a precaution if one gets unplugged. Same for the heaters when needed.
Thanks for the sub Dark VadeR! Good tips and welcome back to the hobby!
Cheers mate thks for sharing.
Maybe you had a few beers 🍻😆😆😆that was funny. I do like to have my Hennessy while working on my tanks😉but I’m focused on what I’m doing
Well, not drinking too much is good advice during a water change, right up there with "Never take a sleeping pill and a laxative at the same time." LOL! Thanks for watching.
Thank you dude I love you for this ❣️❣️❣️
You’re welcome 😀👍🏻
Good one, this should be posted on all forums across the globe.
Fish dying?
Question 1, is usually. How long have your tank been running.
Under 1month - cycle. Above? Q2 Temp? Ph? Well/city water - additivs.
Q3 recently sick fish/newly added fish?
Q4 filter, sump? Cleaned it recently? How, with what.
Rarely needed to ask more.
Super polite helpful chap,thanks mate 👍🏻🇬🇧
You got me on the first one. ADHD + PWC = Flood
I’ve forgotten to unplug stuff and also forgotten to plug back in.
I only forgot the dechlorinater once and remembered within 10 minutes so okay thank goodness 😅
Great video as always 👍
I love honest fish keepers 😀😉 Thank you for watching Joy!
Yep I've forgot to add it to my water once too. It was also about 10 minutes but I felt so bad. I've been guilty of over cleaning. Had a 10 gallon tank given to me and thought how hard could this be? Ha! My first water changei tore the whole thing down and scrubbed everything. Even changed the filters. I had no test strips nothing. I could tell they werent happy so I took about 30% of the water out every other day until they acted right again. Those poor little guppies! One even got a horribly curved spine but still loved 2 years! No idea how! I feel like a noobie again because I'm adding rooted plants, mystery snails and 6 sakura cherry shrimp. I'm so lost with which fertilizers are safe for them and the plants and no more carbon in my filter. I feel so bad of and when they die on me because I know it's something I did
You know, I have a tank ordered but the more I research all this, the more "afraid" I get with what can go wrong and more importantly, I don't know if I want to put this much work into the whole process! Lots of thinking to do here---your video was important for that too! Thank you.
I rinse out detritus out of filter pads out occasionally when doing water changes but mostly don't and just replace media once it's exchausted it's effectiveness. I stand water in buckets and boil water from the cold tap and not hot tap as bad bacteria in the emersion tank kills fish. Never rinse pads with flowing or still tap water because of chlorine and chloramine and metals added to the water for our consumption.
I always put a plant quite near the inlet pipe so it moves slightly with the incoming water so I know the pumps on at a glance
I've flooded my floor 2 times last month. Great information. 👍😊
Is it a wood floor or carpet? I hope not. I've had some good spills and you've never seen someone throw down towel faster than me, LOL!
Thank for information,learn a lot good tips.
You are welcome Linda. Thank you for watching.
Thaks!!!!
All good lessons Ben.
I plan on running my water through a charcoal reactor during water changes when I get my 200G up and running this summer. Hopefully that will take care of any surprises from the water company. Will pay attention to these lessons.
Thanks Ben 👍
Smart idea Michael!
Excellent video..thanks for the helpful advice
You're welcome Lacey
Thanks for the video. I have an additional question. When you say treat for the entire volume, do you mean that even when you are only doing a partial water change, say 20% water change in a 5 gallon tank, you still put enough drops into your tank to treat the full volume of 5 gallons even though it's a partial water change? Thanks for any help you can give.
Each brand of conditioner lists recommended instructions. If going from tap to tank you would usually treat for the full volume of the tank (not just for the amount replaced). When refilling from something like a bucket, you can just treat the water in the bucket before adding.
Good question!
It seems the bucket method is not subject to any of these issues except perhaps the municipal water supply chemicals being added. A self contained and premixed auto top off system can even smooth out the water supply chemic issue since it trickles water in preventing shock.
You're right. Less shock, especially if you have a larger tank to spread out the additives.
I think a common mistake among beginners(as you said, ask me how I know lol) is doing too big of a water change(75%+) --- when you find an ammonia spike, pH crash, or your nitrates get out of hand so, as a newbie, you freak out and decide to replace all of the water or most of it thinking you're doing the right thing. Instead, the dramatic swing can kill them off. Happened to me and I can honestly say I thought I was trying to save them but ended up losing several fish. It was heartbreaking but, I learned my lesson! I think this would fall under your "shock" category.
Just remember that when this happens, slowly acclimate your water back to normal.
Unfortunately Aaron this is the "school of hard knocks" so many of us continue to attend (I don't thing fish keepers ever "graduate", LOL!). Thanks for watching.
I just did this so many cichlids are dying
I do my refills from a roof filled rain barrel with a sump pump hooked up to a garden hose. never had a problem, except maybe the flood caused by too much beer.
Telling on us all!!! 😆 Great topic, Ben. Thank you.
I just want to thank you for this post. I suffered a reality check about city water maintenance back in May. I was not aware they were flooding the system with water treatment, and it happened to be my weekly water change. I had treated as normal with a water conditioner, but there was chlorine overload. I lost most of my fish in my 40-gallon, 10-gallon, and six gallon QT. I treated the survivors for about 7 days with melafix due to damaged fins. Remarkably, 5 fish survived but succumbed to death weeks later. From that day forward, i NOW have 2 five gallons, 1 -3.5 gallons, and three 2.5 gallon buckets of water lining my bathtub, with air stones and 5 heaters running constantly. They sit for no less than 24 hours. I had just gotten the tanks cycled and had to start all over. Good bacteria were obliverated by the high consentration of chlorine/chloramine. I have had no losses due to this issue since then. My husband also added a filtration system for me to help eliminate chlorine. But i will always test my water after that trauma. Then, last night, I made one of my personal biggest mistakes when replacing my American Flag from quarantine for fin rot and treatment, back into his tank. I did not acclimate him back to his normal environment. I knew as soon as I put him in his tank that I had just made the most stupid mistake EVER. He instantly went into shock. He couldn't get his balance. He was running into things. my heart sunk. But something amazing happened. His female partner continuously stayed by his side. Uprighting him. Gently nudging him when he started to swim sideways. I was pleasantly surprised he had survived the night. His mate literally kept him moving. He had plenty of air moving in the tank - his survival from this is yet to be seen. BUT I gotta say, a mistake like that gets the heart rate up because you can't undo the damage. Your post reminded me to slow down and think before doing IT. Whatever "IT" may be. I was contemplating euthanasia. But I have hope. He looks more comfortable now. "Just keep swimming!!"- Tracy
I'm sorry that you had to go through this. Unfortunately it's not an uncommon story. I hope that you bounce back better than before.
I do all my WC's on the same day. I pretest the tap water for total chlorine and ammonia. This catches the days when the water company bombs the water with chlorine and chloramine. Takes less than 3 minutes using test strips. Economical, practical and an insurance policy against a disaster. Great video btw
Totally agree. Here lately our water out of the tap has been showing 3.0- 4.0ppm ammonia on API test kit. I test tap water before every water change to help me determine my Safe dosage for my water changes.
Great safeguard. An ounce of precaution ... Thanks for stopping by John.
Hi Ben, you're right as we get older we do get more distracted with things like watching the fish or just relaxing for a minute while things are going on. I've gotten to the point now where I built myself a overflow alarm out of a smoke alarm with two wires attached to the test button one on the terminal on either side started to the back of it strip the wires back keep them to the floor directly under the tank or in the sum area of your cabinet then when your water overflows you at least have an audible alarm before it flooded the entire house.
That's a smart precaution Michael.
Hi Ben, great video. Yes you do need to concentrate on what your doing when doing water changes. I'm a bucket guy. Can I please ask what species of fish is that blue one you have with the white lips ? Stunning fish.
That fish is a Mdoka White Lips. A placidochromis. And thank you for watching!
Ben Ochart totally meant to tell you I LOVE THAT WHITE LIPS Modoka beautiful ...bet you got it from James at Cichlid Shack😎
I can only thank you fir the tips. I am new to this and I've noticed that my little catfish boys are getting a beating from a larger fish. Constant chase etc. I've wondered what I can do then my " genius mind told me to make a water change. I did. Then kind of all bigger fishes( I have like 5 species known to get well together) acted pretty strong toward eachother. I've turned off the lights then and put a wave maker in it. They've seemed to calm down after. I am very curious to find a video on the aggression of the fish towards others. Thanks again for your input. I've grown a little by hearing this
Your videos are pro. Thanks for sharing
You're welcome. Thank you.
Yes sir great video, and very true. Your a kool dude Ben,god bless.
Thank you!
Good information
Great video Ben I learned the hard way on my heater I didn’t unplug it while I was doing the water change which did damage it
New to the hobby thank you for this info I1 question do I need to do a water change even if everything is reading right
Some do as a preemptive measure. Better to be a little early than too late.
Hey, could you make a video on what would happen if you added too much chlorine conditioner to your tank
Nice video at some point of keeping fish you will have water on the floor. What I’ve found is to have at least 2 power strips 1 for lighting with timers and cabinet lights and other for pumps,power heads,heaters,anything you want off when doing water changes so all you have to do is turn off switch and turn back on no unplugging anything and of course their high up so water doesn’t drip in them
Yes! Great tip. I'm doing that with the 150 but need to do it with 60 and 100. Thanks!
I use a milk jug to fill up my water tank so I avoid the floods.
Hey Ben thank you for the info how many african cichlids can i have in a 75 gallon and also what lighting is best. I have a black sand with black background
My favorite set up, black/black, it really highlights the fish.
Thank you so much. Also how many african Cichlids can i have in a 75 gallon please
I got a small tank that I fill up get the water to the right temperature right pH then do the water change
Sounds very safe. Thanks for watching.
Flooding happened once. Great topic.
I've done it once or twice! That's a terrible feeling you get when you start hearing trickling. "OHHHH NOOOOO"🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I can get a lot of towels down real quick when water starts spreading on our wood floors! It's a real fire drill!
Though I am just a few days into the hobby, I feel that during water change we should not try to bathe the fish (they are always in bath) and we shouldn’t try to create a tidal wave. It’s your hobby take your time and enjoy each process longer.
When I do a water change, and i'm not vacuuming I run my line to my washer drain line. Well I forgot to put the washer drain pipe back into the drain behind the washer and well......Did a load of cloths and it was bad. 99% of mistakes come from getting sidetracked like you said.
great info keep it up Ben
Good point on aggression bumping during major water change / tank mod. The overflow/overfill I finally got under control with a Watchdog water detecter i fabbed a moint for in my sump. Major stress factor alleviated for under $20. Next I want to look at installing an auto shutoff for the pump.
Hahaha..I flood mine bc I'm staring at another tank
Lacey's place same here 😂
2 weeks ago I started a big project of combining 2-20 gallon aquariums, 1-10 gallon and 1-5 gallon into a 60 gallon. I went the cautious route and acclimated all my plants,bacteria,shrimp and fish over a 12 hour period. By the end of it, I was exhausted and wasn't paying as much attention as I should have. Long story short, I flooded small areas of my living room 3 times that night. No alcohol was involved but I thought that night would be a great night to start drinking.😀 You gave some great advice.
Hate when that happens
My new koi guppy and other fish died and they are all pregnant 😭😭😭 so heart breaking
I did the same mistake
Samee😭😭
Yr video showed up at the right time. i just stared up my new 36 gal tank 2.5 weeks ago and i am researching everything i can to give them the best life i can. its been 16 yesrs since i ve had a tank. i did a water change last night. it was my third one so far but it is the first time i mess up, and listening to u I did many things wrong and three of my babies die right then and there. i c now i under treated the water and i did not add stree coat thinking they did not need it..water temp was good i used an electronic one pretty good. was not in a hurry. right now i have all the time i need to spoil them and do things right. thank you very much for helping me understand the extra things that could happen. i will be looking out for those things as well. have a great night.
Thank you for the feedback and I’m glad you found the information helpful. Welcome back to the hobby 😀👍🏻
The flood, yep. Half an hour later I made a super simple water level alarm with a computer motherboard tweeter I put on the rim of the bucket in which I siphon the tank water.
We get real creative and effective after a mishap. I like the alarm idea!
i put in an overflow hose on my Sump that drains to a basement drain so it prevents problems of water change shocking fish. i have a little refrigerator hose drip water in sump to add fresh water and occasionally add a jug of water with some ph. stabilizer so it only gets tiny water changes. have not changed water in many years.
I never touch my filters or vacuum at the same time. And will water change 48 hours after adding new fish.
Great video. You gained a subscriber. Don't change anything.
Great video! I'm guilty of a few of these disasters 😱. I try to get into a Zen state of mind and only focus on the tank. I've found that multitasking just doesn't work with fish keeping (at least for me)!
Question. When treating the whole tank with Prime using python water changer, does the Prime have enough time to detoxify any toxic metals in the tap water (or from old copper pipes)? Is the reaction instantaneous as with chlorine and ammonia?
I believe that it is instant (and I add it at the area where the water is entering the tank). Never had a reaction after a water change doing it that way.
@@BenOchart thank u
My fish love their water changes, I can pretty much guarantee spawning a couple of days after one, it amazes me the number of people that don’t dechlorinate their water, a colleague at work asked my why his tank always went cloudy and the fish were sick after he changes the water, turns out he was filling straight from the tap with nothing to make the water safe, it’s not just the fish that are affected by chlorine the beneficial bacteria is too, ever since he’s been treating the water and had no problems.
Jeff Harris I fill straight from the tap never had a issue. My levels all stay in check
7205buttas yes, as I said many people do, chlorine and heavy metals wouldn’t alter you PH, nitrate, ammonia so won’t show if you tested afterwards, I guess it also depends on the percentage of the change, 10 or 20% and the affect is reduced compared to a 50, 60 or even as with the guy I mentioned 70% water change.
Chlorine even in small amounts will give your fish chemical burns and will kill bacteria, after all that’s why they add it to tap water, for the cost and time associated with conditioning the water it’s a very small act that will benefit your fish.
Think of it like this, not everyone used their seatbelt, they may say they don’t need to as they’ve never had a crash but one day they will, it’s not worth the risk for a moment of extra effort. 😉
Jeff Harris I have a 90 gallon and have the “python water changer” it would take me forever to treat my water for a water change and be 5x the work. I tend to do about a 30% change weekly. I can prob go 2-3 weeks as I have a lot if plants but I just like to do them before anything builds up. Also have 2 canister filter that I don’t touch on the days if water changes to make sure I don’t mess up too much of my bacteria and throw my tank into shock. I clean 1 filter out a month, so essentially I clean out my canisters every 2 months.
7205buttas sweet, you could add prime to the tank by simply dispersing it across the surface before you start refilling, the process of filling back up will mix it through and neutralise the chlorine 😉
Jeff Harris I guess but considering I have a 90g with 2 canister filters that prob hold like another 4 gallons each I prob have around 90g 4-95 gallons total when you take the rocks and decorations into account. Only changing about 25-30 gallons out a week isn’t really gonna harm the fish. Also have 2 power heads so the water mixes up pretty good and I never take it down low enough to have to swap the filters out. I also don’t really vacuum the gravel I just use the power heads to get the detritus kicked up and suck up as much of it out as I can and let the filters do the job on the rest
My dad use to flood the living room almost all the time ..🤣falling asleep on the couch
Not very bright was he
Only (so far) issue I have had was a bucket with a small hole in it. Left the old water sitting on the carpet too long. Was using separate bucket to fill tank at room temperature. Was not happy
Just dont change more then 30 percent of the tank water and use Prime conditioner.
Make sure you let your water run for at least 5 to 10 minutes before adding fresh water from tap.
Siphon your substrate only once a month and never clean your filter at the same time you do a water change.
Wait at least two weeks, then clean your filter.
Follow all of this and you will be perfectly fine.
@Apollyon 2 I would only change about 15 to 20 percent of the water in your 10 gallon.
I would do a water change more frequently on such a small tank. Maybe every three to four days.
You can siphon it while you take out the water, but I would not clean or change the filter media at the same time you do a water change.
By changing the water and cleaning your filter it would only crash your tank and wipe out the beneficial bacteria your fish depend on.
Yes, add your condition after you do the water change. Just make sure you allow your tap to run for at least 5 to 10 minutes before adding fresh water.
Do this and you should be good to go.
@Apollyon 2 dont listen to this idiot you do not have to clean the tank every 3 to 4 days that's bullshit especially with very little fish I clean it every month and a half it's a 10 gal and the water is mostly crystal clear unless I stir up the bottem and when I clean it I do a 90 percent water change and change the media and leave 10 percent of the water for beneficial bacteria after 3 hours of the water running in the tank I put all the fish back
Wild G4MING What? A 90 percent water change isn’t good. And you take out the fish when you do a water change? You’re are wrong, not the other person. There is no beneficial bacteria in water. Research before talking crap.
@@iiomqblue I'm doing everything right cause if I wasn't my fish would of been dead but there not
Wild G4MING Yea they are living, but that doesn’t mean they are thriving.
I use
Soil and sand from the beach
Then some water plants that use the soil and the fish waste grow and the sand also somehow keeps it clean
My tank is clear and has always been
I feel so dad and I’m so sad... all of my fish died today when I did a water change😭
That's terrible. Did you figure out what went wrong?
Mines also today
Bloody morons
Experienced same today 😥
niko hall 😆
Very helpful!!!!!!!
Ur content is Super Genius 💯
2:30 Those Cichlids are beautiful! Here is something that I heard of... Someone was using a bucket to add water to their 125 gallon tank and they rested the bucket on the rim of the tank and the tank shattered.
Hey, I really enjoy your channel btw! I have a question, I use containers to add water to my 30-gallon tank after a water change when can I add the water conditioner? i have been adding a little with each container but in doing that my measurements aren't really accurate, can I add after I fill the tank without the chlorine hurting my fish?
A little with each container is fine. Stir it around a little and you're good to go.
@@BenOchart Thanks for getting back to me so quick I am planning on a water change today. Have a great day!
With smaller tanks, 55 and lower I am very paranoid about matching new water temperature to tank water and often will gravel vac with the Python but bucket fill so I can get the temperature exact.
Something I do which I think helps my cichlids is, I skip feeding my fish for a day after a water change. I think it gives the good bacteria time to build up and reduces the ammonia spike in the tank
P Man that’s a good idea. I always feed them after so they like me again, but your way makes more sense 👍
What you can also do is add bacteria starter of any brand. Make sure though it's the right bacteria. Anaerobic and aerobic bacteria - The one that are used in the nitrogen cycle. But don't get the bacteria that's used to break down uneaten food & debris in your aquarium. Sinead the bottle.
@@joythompson4134 haha! little did u know.... they hated your guts. lol
I have done the overflow on my 125 tank a few times years ago when I had three young kids and often their friends running around. I like to refill slowly so I can monitor the water temperature and my mind wanders while slowly refilling.
flood while watching your filter video about canister hahahah
Blame me, LOL!
😂😂😂
Lollllll😂😂😂😂
Lol
Fortunately for me, our whole house is rain water collection with sophisticated Germain filtering/UV light and pre-filtration. So in effect, a total RODI System. If anything I have to add minerals to my tank water like you would a shrimp tank. I've never even tested any ammonia/nor any trites/trates...ever. My tank is now well established.
Good info! Beautiful fish!! New sub!
Thank you!
I put music on & don't look at anything just aquarium work. 25% every two weeks same temp / little aquarium salt / Prime conditioner..am good 10 yrs 90 gal / 2 hob filters & air Stone 25 tiger barbs few small cats & all good ...Good infro
Sounds like you’ve got it down with a very nice set up😀👍🏻
I have only been guilty of flooding the floor (many times in the house, countless times in the garage) and draining too much water (99%-twice) in my aquariums. I have also forgotten to plug the filter back in. (holy hydrogen sulfide, Batman)
An honest fish keeper. All I can say is, "been there , done that!"
You should put a line on your fish tank to know how much water to take out it’s a lot of help
@@timelapses4529 yeah I just use buckets
WOW Ben. You answered a big question I always had. I have a 29gal Aqueon kit tank and it came with a water conditioner specifically for tap water. I always added the conditioner according to the amount I'm changing (half dose of conditioner to 1/2 water change)But you are saying add conditioner for the full 29 gallons? Thanks!!!
You’re welcome
I have an albino pleco too..her name is Sally 💜💜I rescued her...seems like albinos are rare by the reactions I get when telling people
Depends where you live, I guess. I'm looking for one for my new mbuna cichlid tank!🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
@@Fyyt I'm in Edmonton..
@@pamelamorrisonn Winnipeg for me!
@@pamelamorrisonn so....how's Sally doing? Lol
@@Fyyt Excellent..love her so much😁Garry is in the tank with her but hes not albino..
Ammonia is the biggest problem with water changes because it's regularly used by water departments across the country...you would see it more in the winter than summer but they do add it so be careful.
Ben the stir up is real...water changes change the make up of the tank and the temperature usually changes with the water change...I had this happen yesterday and the temp of my tank went up from 79 to 83 after doing a 40% change...it definitely caused a "stir" and several fish became more aggressive for a few hours.
Gurvinder Parmar Ammonia in the water. I doubt it’s even safe for humans 🤔
My venustus went after my polystigma real hard after a water change.
Thanks for watching Gurvinder 😀👍🏻
@@BenOchart Yes, as crazy as it sounds, they do treat water with ammonia along with chlorine.....I think the sudden temp change is also a big factor in their sudden aggression...cichlids in the wild generally mate in warmer seasons so I think that is a trigger...but in my tank, the water changes don't come every week like they used to in the past. So now, when that change comes, I think it affects them more because they aren't used to it.
Makes sense. Creates mass confusion in an all male tank.
I would add 1mm distilled white vinegar per gallon to neutralize the ammonia. It will save your fish.