Congrats on the move to AG Kev.
Don't worry about the bubbling. It's almost completely irrelevant. It just shows you have a pressure differential between your fermenter and the outside air because of the build up of CO2 as the yeasties do their thing. The CO2 may still be building up, but escaping elsewhere - like a poor seal on the lid of your fermenter.
The important thing to measure is your starting gravity and what your gravity reading is now. That will tell you how close to completion you are. You will want to ensure your final gravity reading is stable for around 3 days.
A few questions that will help answer you more completely:
What yeast did you use? How much did you pitch and what was your starting gravity?
If you only used a blow off tube for the first day, what did you use after that?
What was the temperature of your beer in the fermentation vessel? Did you hold it steady, or did you ramp it up? How are you controlling your temeperature?
Regardless of whether you're making an AG beer, or a K&K beer, the most important part of the process is ensuring you have a healthy and uninfected yeast population to ensure proper fermentation.
If you haven't already, I would highly recommend reading How To Brew by Jonathon Palmer
http://www.howtobrew.com/