"Adopting" someone else's established tank

Gluestick

New member
I am thinking about adopting my friend's 55 gal setup, which has live sand, live rock, some anemones and a few small fish. She is having a baby and is no longer going to have the time to take care of the fish. She lives about 30 miles from me. If I were to do this, what would be the best way to go about transporting fish, rock, h20, etc.... I do not have a saltwater tank of my own yet, and I thought that this would be an (relativly) inexpensive way to start out my new hobby. Does anyone have advice for me?
 
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First off, the best thing you can go armed with is knowledge. Surf around this site, buy a good book on reef care (I recommend The Reef Aquarium), and read a lot on other sites online. Just because you are starting with an established tank doesn't mean things will go without a hitch necessarily. Every time you move the substrate and live rock, you'll end up causing some die-off in bacteria that help keep the tank balanced, so you'll partially restart the cycle. Also, animals like anemones sometimes are good once established, but have problems with sudden changes in water conditions.

That being said, you can do it if you think things through. You have years of FW experience, which will help you to a point. Bring some large buckets--the kind used for selling salt, or 5-10 gallon Home Depot buckets; or large tupperware types. I would transport rock separately from livestock... and should you choose to keep sand, get another bucket for that. Do you have plans for RO/DI yet?

If you have LR that doesn't have any corals or anemones on it, you can transport this in wet newspaper, or in water... but if you do the latter, be aware that it will be HEAVY. Same goes true for the sand, should you plan to keep that (some do not, because when you stir the layers and disrupt the order of them, you stir up a lot of things that can release nutrients into the water... I personally have gone through this several times in the past few years and know it can be done, no doubt it is a PITA). Because you are 30 miles away, you can probably get by without a heater or a portable aerator; but you still have to do this process in a timely way, since the moving into buckets alone will take more than an hour in most cases. For pieces of rock with anemones and corals on them, I recommend you label them, because once they shrink down, it will be difficult to remember where they are, and you can crush them accidentally when rearranging. Note that anemones are not as sessile as corals and will move quite a bit when there are new conditions.

Lastly, acclimate verything slowly. SW animals are often more sensitive than FW ones. You will probably have to have some new SW already made up with RO/DI, because this is a slow process, and you won't be able to transport 50 gal at once. Get it in circulation and at the right temperature ASAP... the former being very important for establishing the tank again. It will likely take quite a while before the tank recovers, and it will be cloudy for some days initially. Monitor the water conditions during that time closely.

In fact, on second thought... if you have someone else in the marine hobby (or a friendly LFS with a clean tank), you may want to ask them to hold on to the animals during the move instead, this is the least stressful method.

Good luck!
 
Thank you very much for replying to my post! What is a RO/DI??? PS. I have I have the book you mentioned, along with a few others that I have read cover to cover multiple times! I'm not an expert, but I am so excited and eager to start this hobby!!! Also, I've been lurking around this website for about am onth trying to absord all the info I can. Again, thank you for your imput. If you have any other ideas, I'm open to suggestions! Also, why would the anemones shrink down - do I wrap them in the wet newspaper too??
 
18 gal rougneck rubbermade totes with lids are about the same price as a 5gal bucket. Buy 6 of those (about $20-25 total) and you will be able to carry every drop. Obviously you'd need a van or truck.

Keep all livestock on water, no newspaper!

RO/DI is Reverse Osmosis and Deionizing. It's a water filter that gives you super clean water to mix with salt and for top off water. If you have anything bad in your tap water it will eventually build up to many times the concentration it comes out of your tap.
 
Keep the anemone submerged in water at all times if possible.
RO/DI is clean, filtered water. Most reefers use this as it is clean, unlike tapwater.(distilled and R/O only are o.k. substitutes)(maybe your local grocery store has a outside pay per gallon H2O fountain? If not, look into www.airwaterice.com)
 
I've moved tanks from 10 to 125 gallons. Just be prepared to spend some time & have glass splinters. Should be relatively easy.

Some stores will let you return the buckets/containers if you rinse them out well. LFS will give you bags or purchase for a small price. They know you will visit them again if you are getting into the hobby.

RO/DI - Reverse Osmosis De Ionization - something like that. It purifies tap water & removes the disolved solids which are harmful to the livestock. It's a lot easier to use this water than worry about fish/coral deaths & algea. If you don't have a unit, lots of LFS sell the water & it might make more sense for a small tank for a beginner.

Don't worry - SW requires all the maintenance that you should be doing with a FW system. The fish just cost a lot more.

Welcome to the addition!
 
Gluestick, just to clarify (though I think I made it pretty clear in my post, too), I meant only live rock with NOTHING growing on it except coraline (purple algae), as the others have said, anemones & corals need to be fully submerged at all times! Anemones will react to any changes in water quality, and the necessary stirring and moving that will come when you put them in buckets will disturb them enough to cause them to shrink (but hopefully, only temporarily).
 
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