I set up the tank on Sunday and destroyed one filter.. LOL.. someone here suggested giving it a day before turning a filter on and so that's what I did.. Monday I started filtration (no carbon) and added ammonia.. have healthy bacteria from an established, disease-free tank, got a reading of 4 - 5 ppm ammonia. Today being Tuesday, the filter has been running now for over 24 hours with the ammonia in the water.. got a reading of 2 - 3 ppm and nitrites between .25 - .5 .. since I'm getting nitrites already, I'm assuming it's because of the bacteria I'm using?? How do I know when the nitrites spike, when they start going down? Do I add more ammonia at that point, or I saw someone did the fishless cycling with fish food, can I do that? And do I keep adding an ammonia source until it reads 0, right?
I do have some live plants in the tank as well, in case that matters. I read some articles that said they would be beneficial, some said they wouldn't make a difference at all, and some said they would contribute to an algae problem. I decided to take the risk of algae if there was any possibility at all of a benefit from having them. All the plants are young and healthy.. but don't ask me what kind they are because I don't have that info handy and would probably take me several hours to find all the tiny pieces of paper I have the names of them on found.. LOL
I am truly VERY excited about FISHLESS cycling and not harming anyone.. wish I had done it with the tank I already have going, but unfortunately was ignorant to the most of the cycle process itself.. live and learn and hopefully not harm or kill anymore fish friends with ignorance!!
Even tho this process is seriously testing my patience, it is very nice to slow down and really THINK about what I want in the tank when it's stocking time. I was browsing in LFS today and just really so happy about the planning process.

I HAVE GOT TO get hubby to get my 55 out of storage!!! Who needs a bed in the bedroom anyway..
