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<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8570821#post8570821 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jnarowe
just a little reminderZ: If you don't cap the pipes, things will find their way in and colonize...
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8571370#post8571370 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jnarowe
Those look great! Check out Steve Weast's experience with the Worm Incident...that will make your toe nails curl up and fall right off.![]()
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8572728#post8572728 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by asnatlas
Yea I know all about his worm incident... I hope that my tank will look half as good as his one day... I have only used baserock in the display and don't plan on adding any LR with out cooking it first...
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8578191#post8578191 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jnarowe
This is such and interesting concept to me, and I mean no offense whatsoever...Why buy live rock if you are going to cook it? You are paying a premium price for importation of specialized material, and then you will kill everything that comes in on it.
I realize that this is "the way it is done" but I just don't understand it. I brought my rock in, swished it in a bucket of SW, inspected and removed unwanted hitch-hikers, and tossed it into the tank. I immediately fired up my lamps and managed to save a lot of the natural life that came in on the rock.
Don't get me wrong, some of the life I saved isn't neccessarily desirable, but most of it is and the rest can be managed. I had a wicked HA outbreak because I had no skimmer on the system, and if it weren't for that, I would have saved hundreds of encrusting corals too. (some of which have come back anyway)
I ended up with very cool sponges, a couple thorny oysters, various inverts including stomatella (which are breeding), limpets, fan worms, macro algae, and incredible coraline algae in purple, blue, red, orange, green, and yellow. And probably most important of all, what we cannot see, is a huge variety of bacteria found on a natural reef.
If you are going to cook your rock, why not just buy cool shapes of $1/lb. base rock and seed it with coraline? That will give you the effect you want without the high cost of "live" rock. And if I may rant a bit more, what we see in LFS stores is NOT live rock IMO. It was live rock when they received it, but I have yet to see an LFS keep the rock under conditions that keep it alive.
Tyically they dump it into a tank with very low light, stacked to the rim, and most often without even a skimmer on it. Within a matter of just a few days that rock is as dead as it gets. And then the store wants $6-$12/lb!!
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8580976#post8580976 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by spazz
i really dont think you need the sulfur denitrator. your skimmer should be big enough to handle the nitrates you have in the system. if you end up with nitrates in your system you skimmer is not doing its job properly. thats a bubble king you have if i remember right, so it should be fine. you would be waisting your money on that reacotr if you got it. you sould never have a nitrate spike. that system is not that big. and that skimmer is huge so it sould pull out all the nutrients before they start breaking down and turning into nitates. bill wann was using a sulfer denitrator for years. he took it off his system now that his big skimmer is running on there. his nitrates are at zero.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8581038#post8581038 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jnarowe
I totally agree with that. Nitrates are at the low end of risk in our reefs anyway IMO. Phosphate is the tough one. Nitrates can easily be reduced through water changes, removing detritus, etc. whereas phophates can leach in through Ca reactors and embed in the rock.
My nitrates have been zero since day one, and I rarely vacuum my tank.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8581658#post8581658 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by asnatlas
BTW, I rem you posting about Bill getting his RO stuff some a few different places, could you post those links again... I am looking for bulk DI and what not... Also I think you posted something about using a specific (higher) grade, what is the advance over the "standard" DI ??
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8578191#post8578191 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by jnarowe
This is such and interesting concept to me, and I mean no offense whatsoever...Why buy live rock if you are going to cook it? You are paying a premium price for importation of specialized material, and then you will kill everything that comes in on it.
I realize that this is "the way it is done" but I just don't understand it. I brought my rock in, swished it in a bucket of SW, inspected and removed unwanted hitch-hikers, and tossed it into the tank. I immediately fired up my lamps and managed to save a lot of the natural life that came in on the rock.
Don't get me wrong, some of the life I saved isn't neccessarily desirable, but most of it is and the rest can be managed. I had a wicked HA outbreak because I had no skimmer on the system, and if it weren't for that, I would have saved hundreds of encrusting corals too. (some of which have come back anyway)
I ended up with very cool sponges, a couple thorny oysters, various inverts including stomatella (which are breeding), limpets, fan worms, macro algae, and incredible coraline algae in purple, blue, red, orange, green, and yellow. And probably most important of all, what we cannot see, is a huge variety of bacteria found on a natural reef.
If you are going to cook your rock, why not just buy cool shapes of $1/lb. base rock and seed it with coraline? That will give you the effect you want without the high cost of "live" rock. And if I may rant a bit more, what we see in LFS stores is NOT live rock IMO. It was live rock when they received it, but I have yet to see an LFS keep the rock under conditions that keep it alive.
Tyically they dump it into a tank with very low light, stacked to the rim, and most often without even a skimmer on it. Within a matter of just a few days that rock is as dead as it gets. And then the store wants $6-$12/lb!!
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8585074#post8585074 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by clekchau
where would one get $1 a lb base rock??? the cheapest i saw was $3 a lb.![]()