Newbie with a fungus problem?)


Normally, I do my first test right out the tap. Then add dechlor and test again. It’s at this point that you should see an ammonia reading presuming you have chloramine in your water. Then test again at 24 hours and 48 hours. This is really something you need to find out from your water utility. It’s not always listed in the water utility reports as you will see in my blog about “Chlorine - Chloramine Information” where I question my own water utility and get their replies, all in writing. Since the EPA only requires them to report chlorine levels, that is all they report so their reports can be misleading about chloramine. Typical gov’ment… in order to have uniformity, everything is uniformly dumbed down! lol
Lenny Vasbinder Fish Blog - http://GoldLenny.blogspot.com (Links to any articles referenced in above reply are listed on the right side, alphabetically under Labels and also under Archives by Year, Month)

Category: Philippines Internet Koi Society

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