noob tips i rarely see and others
#1
Posted 15 April 2012 - 09:46 AM
i use 3x reading glasses and hand lens for closer look...buy your cleanup crew small, big crabs and snails rough up your corals and make a lot of work for you...keep rockwork far enough from glass for algae work,we all have to do it sometime...set base live rock deep in sand if you intend to have diggers, pistol shrimp dig A LOT....plot out your moves when u need to get in a tank,,,avalanches suck!...have plenty of flat surfaces for coral placement, the more natural, irregular reef texture will come as u add livestock..learn how to frag...and always, PATIENCE, do your research,dont over feed or under light
#2
Posted 16 April 2012 - 12:54 PM
On pistol shrimp, I'd heard they tend to be nuisances but I've also read about folks keeping them with companion gobies. Any comments on your experience?
#3
Posted 16 April 2012 - 01:56 PM
www.shop.reeffiltration.com
#4
Posted 16 April 2012 - 03:53 PM
Dont look for a quick fix for anything in this hobby.
#5
Posted 16 April 2012 - 04:35 PM
#6
Posted 16 April 2012 - 05:10 PM
#7
Posted 16 April 2012 - 05:17 PM
something else i didnt think much at first, i was putting some of the corals in at angles,especially with the long frag tails.. but most of them seem to do best with their original orientation..i was cutting some of them off for better placement..seems like i need to move them a few times before i get the right spot anyway...space and light and flow rationed out in a nano.. i found some pretty good magnifying loupes and even a small $10 microscope at radio shack, i use them for work but i m gonna bring it home to check out the sand..might be a good meeting topic to actually look at what is in live sand..
#8
Posted 17 April 2012 - 07:07 AM
We have ALL made this mistake.....Plan your purchases out for livestock....That really beautiful coral may be a good price but when it dies because you don't know it's requirements... Same thing for fish and other livestock. Lots of beautiful fish out there but some of them are very specific feeders and require an intense feeding schedule or even worse won't ever eat in a home aquarium. It's sad but one of the most beautiful fish out there is in this category....the mandarin. Many people are successful with one but very few of them have young tanks.
54g RR corner bowfront,sump,fuge and LED lighting. Still a young tank with lots of room for coral.
Trainer of German Shepherd
Hunter of Whitetail.
Eater of good food
Drinker of good beer.
#9
Posted 17 April 2012 - 07:16 AM


125g Mixed Reef 72 LED DIY 2 Vortech MP40's 25g eshopps sump swc 160 Cone skimmer 29g refugium Apex Lite w/ VDM, Breakout box Maxi Jet 4500 Return pump
#10
Posted 17 April 2012 - 07:58 PM
#11
Posted 17 April 2012 - 08:49 PM
Plastic is the devil.
"Where's my tooth?"
I LOVE PIZZA!
#12
Posted 17 April 2012 - 08:59 PM
Mine suggestions would be:
Start small and learn the basics - be sure you like the hobby, the work, the commitment, and money involved before going full bore with a big tank. Research your purchases before buying any piece of livestock or equipment. Buy a RO/DI. Learn nutrient and Ca/alk control.
---------------------------------------------
:beer:
Mixed Reef, started 10/2004: 6'x2'x2' Bare Bottom 180g Display, 150lbs LR, 40B sump, Tunze Silence 1073, SeaSwirl, Eshopps PF-1200, Vertex IN-180, PM Ca reactor, 3x250w MH, Lumenarc Minis, 2xVHO Actinic, AC3-DC8-DC4HD-Aquasurf-ATO, Tunze 6105 pair & 40B frag tank
6 Fish, 20+ corals, 50+ snails, worms, bugs, etc.
#13
Posted 18 April 2012 - 05:58 PM
#14
Posted 18 April 2012 - 07:06 PM

older pic from the top, better now
#15
Posted 18 April 2012 - 07:24 PM
#16
Posted 19 April 2012 - 01:49 PM
...i know its not well recommended but the aged live rock really turned the tank on..
Are you referring to adding items that haven't been quarantined? I've read that EVERYTHING - including live rock and sand should be quarantined before being added to the display tank. I'm not sure how that would work when setting up a tank to begin with unless you start with sterile sand/rock and add smaller pieces of live rock for seeding.
Also, have the critters reproduced and spread to your other rocks or just the coraline?
#17
Posted 19 April 2012 - 01:50 PM
Are you referring to adding items that haven't been quarantined? I've read that EVERYTHING - including live rock and sand should be quarantined before being added to the display tank. I'm not sure how that would work when setting up a tank to begin with unless you start with sterile sand/rock and add smaller pieces of live rock for seeding.
Also, have the critters reproduced and spread to your other rocks or just the coraline?
Yeah they will reproduce and take over all the rocks over time. I don't think you really need to qt rock and sand. I have never QT those. If you are going to qt those you might as well by dry sand and base rock.


125g Mixed Reef 72 LED DIY 2 Vortech MP40's 25g eshopps sump swc 160 Cone skimmer 29g refugium Apex Lite w/ VDM, Breakout box Maxi Jet 4500 Return pump
#18
Posted 19 April 2012 - 05:49 PM
#19
Posted 19 April 2012 - 05:57 PM
#20
Posted 19 April 2012 - 10:02 PM
Yeah they will reproduce and take over all the rocks over time. I don't think you really need to qt rock and sand. I have never QT those. If you are going to qt those you might as well by dry sand and base rock.
Here's the articleand the quote:
I would urge aquarists to quarantine everything added to their tanks that could possibly carry a pathogen or pest, or that needs extra care: fishes, motile invertebrates, corals, live rock, live sand, etc. Basically, anything that is wet should be quarantined.
For rock (and probably rubble as well), he talks about flatworms, nudibranchs, majano and aiptasia as hitchhikers.
Here's another article that's also really insistent on quarantining. It does make sense to me but it would be pretty limiting on the amount added at one time. Perhaps the initial assembly of the display could be done as a temporary quarantine tank.
Interestingly enough, he also talks about having the quarantine last 30 days AFTER the last treatment for any pests found. A more recent post on another forum says that he's since doubled that to sixty days. I think that there are some pests that can appear (hatch, etc) after a month. Your lenses would be a great tool in doing examinations, fraxinius. Where did you get them?
0 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users












