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Study up on fishless cycling would be my recommendation. It is far less stressful than cycling with fish in a system, especially with your high pH well water. (You want to avoid raising pH when there is high ammonia and fish in a system and an ammonia spike when cycling with fish is generally inevitable.) And doing a water change is often recommended but if your well water will only raise pH, it isn't a good thing.
So, here is a link to a thread I started about fishless cycling on the BYAP forum (I'm not up to repeating it all at the moment)
http://backyardaquaponics.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=6809
Study up on fishless cycling would be my recommendation. It is far less stressful than cycling with fish in a system, especially with your high pH well water. (You want to avoid raising pH when there is high ammonia and fish in a system and an ammonia spike when cycling with fish is generally inevitable.) And doing a water change is often recommended but if your well water will only raise pH, it isn't a good thing.
So, here is a link to a thread I started about fishless cycling on the BYAP forum (I'm not up to repeating it all at the moment)
http://backyardaquaponics.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=11&t=6809
I guess I hadn't paid very close attention to size on the gravel. My gravel is 1/2" brown river rock, which means it fit through the 1/2" mesh screen when they separate the gravel into different products. So my gravel is 1/2" and smaller. It seems like fine media to me but I have a good population of composting worms. I think a mix between 1/2" and 3/4" would be even better but I've never found that size mix in an affordable option that wasn't limestone.
I personally think 1/4" and smaller may well give you some issues long term.
Hey, this might be an interesting video for you to watch. It is how I set up a bell siphon and a cheap and easy aquaponics system, theres a step by step guide to aquaponics linked on the video:
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