everything looks good, i'm guessing the issue might have been the organic cider. I'll give you my secret recipe but don't tell anyone. it very very guarded.
5 gallons mott's 100% apple
juice from walmart. the cheap kind, not the organic stuff with apple bits in it.
1 package wyeast American Ale II (actually just slurry from having racked an ale to a keg)
pitch yeast in 6.5 gallon carboy with juice. OG will be about 1.052 or so. Wait a week for all the activity to stop. FG will be about 1.004 or so. That makes about a 4.5-5% abv. Chill it in fridge for 2 days to cold crash and get it clearer.
then i rack from the primary to a keg and force carbonate for the first few days while drinking it, finally after about 2-3 days the carbonation is spot on and i drop the co2 pressure to 12 psi.
when i'm ready rack to the keg, I buy another 5 gallons of apple juice and pour it into the carboy on top of the old yeast as soon as i've finished racking. and the whole thing starts again.
I add no sugar or backsweeten, and i have tried using apple cider with not as great results. I've also skimped and used the walmart brand apple juice, but the motts finishes clearer. I will reuse the same yeast without ever taking it out of the carboy. everyone likes it and drinks it as fast as my beers. now that i've got one in keg on tap, one in keg in fridge, i take the last inch that i didn't rack and swirl it in the carboy to make a yummy yeast slurry. makes about 3 mason jars worth. I store these mason jars in the fridge to pitch in my next batch so i don't have to buy more yeast. I'm at about 20 cents per pint of cost for the cider.
I ferment at room temperature with the ale yeast, which is about 72 in my house.
I've got a batch i added 5 lbs of sugar to and used a wine yeast instead, and it's at 11% abv, it tastes like a pinot grigio. i'm not gonna carb that one, i'll bottle it like wine. I've let that one sit for about 3 weeks and now it's in the fridge clearing. It's pretty clear, but still some haze. tastes like a d/ecent white. I've tried making reds and they tasted like cheap wine, this stuff tastes like a basic $12 bottle of white. much better and easier than the reds.
just no making fun of my complex recipe.