Another log of a Newbie starting out with TBS rock!

Dave,

I found your thread again! Did you ever find out what was making the piles in your sand? I have several of those in my tank now after adding my part 2....hum...

Brian
 
No, I never figured it out. It still happens from time to time. A pile of fine sand in the middle of all the rubble. I am not around my tank in the dead of night since it is in my classroom so I have NO idea what makes them!
 
water flow, picks up little pieces of sand and deposits them where the flow is low. at least that was my experience. the sand is fine because that is the easiest for the powerheads to move around.
 
I got the new bulbs in Tuesday and installed them tuesday afternoon. The difference is AMAZING!!! The tank looks so much brighter and bluer, it is incredible!!!

I scrubbed the tank tuesday night and yesterday was the first full day with the new lights. I did have brown algae growth through the day but not nearly as much as normal. I scrubbed the tank even better yesterday and today will be the second full day with the lights. I imagine my problem will slowly subside with the new lights as I scrub away the left over algae (impossible to get all of it with one water change and scrub!) and my new cleanup crew goes to work.

In short it looks as if the lights are working but it is too early to tell completely. Will update later.
 
Two pics I snapped real quick this morning.

urchin.jpg


damsel.jpg
 
Dave, did you overcome the algea problem? Like I said up there those new pics are awesome, looks like the new lights are rocking for sure. I need to replace a few of my PC's also, did you get them from the LFS or order them, and if so where?

Hope all is well
 
One year update

One year update

I have now had my TBS reef tank for almost exactly a year. In fact it will have been exactly one year on the 22nd of October. When I first decided to start a coral reef tank a couple of years ago I ran into pictures of TBS rock and i knew I could only have TBS rock for my tank. Many people gave me lots of negatives, such as bad hitchhikers and that most of the life wouldnââ"šÂ¬Ã¢"žÂ¢t survive.

It has been quite a journey. The initial cycle was nearly non-existent and all the life survived the initial cycle. I got a mantis shrimp and a number of other bad hitchhikers but they were and are relatively easy to remove with a little patience. One year later much of the life is still alive. All of the clams except one are still surviving, a great amount of the sponges are still hanging in there and I have dozens of porcelain crabs and other invertebrate life that is going strong. I am still amazed that I still find new things in the tank after a year. I have a pistol shrimp somewhere I have never seen but that I hear from time to time.

I lost a really nice velvety blood red encrusting sponge that was my favorite because one of my Condy anemones parked near it and destroyed it. I liked the anemone more than the sponge though so I left it.

I had a long and expensive battle with either brown algae or dinoflagelletes. It started when my tank temperature shot to over 90 degrees for a while as the school district cut the A/C in my room while I was away to Florida. I came back to a tank so choked with algae you couldnââ"šÂ¬Ã¢"žÂ¢t tell the lights were on. I beat it, about 2 months later. Through a combination of frequent partial water changes, new lights, a phos-ban reactor, a treatment of Chemi-clean and killing the lights for almost two weeks. The stuff hasnââ"šÂ¬Ã¢"žÂ¢t made a return. I am also now dripping kalk.

The tank now looks AWESOME; probably better than it ever has. I have added very little coral, only a branching hammer, a devils hand coral, a Kenya tree coral and a green brain. They are all doing well and the Kenya tree coral has now become more of a weed than a coral. It drops branches on a daily basis. I know one day I bet I will be posting "HOW THE HELL DO I GET RID OF THIS CRAP!!" LOL. The coral that came on the rock is doing really well, the small brain is really inflated all the time and most of the cup corals are alive and looking well. I had to let a couple groups of them die as I just couldnââ"šÂ¬Ã¢"žÂ¢t reach them all the time to feed them.

The algae problem really took its toll on the life in the tank though. A large amount of my coralline bleached and it managed to kill off a few sponges. However, the tank rebounded really well, coralline is starting to grow again, and I have tunicates I have not seen in forever pop back up.

I have 6 fish, four small Azure Damsles that are awesome! I love them; they have so much personality and color. I also have one Perc clown and a lawnmower blenny. I was really worried about the blenny for a while as he wasnââ"šÂ¬Ã¢"žÂ¢t eating. He was trying to actually scrape film algae off the side of the tank! He now eats from the seaweed clip. I plan on only one more small fish, a royal gramma.

I have not had any really mysterious fish deaths over the year either. I had a coral beauty angel and a royal gramma get eaten by my largest Condy anemone. Other than that I cannot think of any other fish deaths.

I am going to setup a 110-gallon long in my classroom next year. I debated on whether I was going to go with TBS rock or not, I am. The 100 will be a TBS reef tank. I can probably get the tank in Jan and will slowly buy the equipment needed and order the rock around Sept of next year. I am going to stock it with a whole slew of Azure damsels, a couple percs, a flame angel, a mandarin, and a yellow tang.

I will post pics when I can, they have us so busy at work I have to schedule time to breathe in my calendar!
 
Long time, no entry

Long time, no entry

Wow, my last entry was on 10/16 2005. Well over a year ago!!

A lot has changed in that year, everything is running GREAT and looking amazing. I still have no regrets whatsoever with going with TBS rock and their "package". I have made or done the following:

1. I switched about 6 weeks ago to IO Reef Crystals for the added calcium and alk.

2. I drip kalk 24/7.

3. I started dosing C-Balance to keep the alk and CA up where it should be. Since switching salts and dosing C-Balance I have noticed everything seems happier and a dramatic reduction in problem algae.

I wont bore anyone with more details. I will just show off some pictures.

The digital camera I checked out from the schools library is suposed to be "better" than our old one but I dont like it. The macro function doesnt seem to work and I can never get as clean and good shots as I did with the old one. Oh well, here are a bunch of pictures!

blenny.JPG


center.JPG


center2.JPG


center3.JPG


center4.JPG


clam.JPG


clam2.JPG


fulltank.JPG
 
A Comparison

A Comparison

This is what the hammer coral that you see in the above pics looked like when I got it:

hammerstart.jpg


You can see that it is now HUGE and in two pieces. Before I fragged it in two the total head size was around 14 inches.

Not bad work if I do say so myself :)
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8850547#post8850547 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by BrianPlankis
Looking good! Nice to see an update ;)

How is your TBS brain coral(s) doing?

Brian

The TBS brains are doing well. If you look at one of the full tank shots, look just to the left of the secod stalk of tree coral on the left and you can see one hiding out. When happy and fully inflated he is about the size of a small adults fist.

I had another that refuses to die. When I was aranging rock initially I had to decide what to cover up and what to not because of the amazing amount of life on TBS rock. I decided to cover it up and it resided and began to die off, as I knew it would. When I was battling dinos I actaully scrubbed what was left of its skeleton with a toothbrush a couple of times. It was bare.

It is now coming back and growing quickly. I think many of these animals we keep have an amazing ability to rebound from sickness and poor conditions, much moreso than we give them credit for.

The large green brain in the center was given to me as half a skeleton. It has grown tremendously and is now almost too big for the tank, or at least the place I am keeping it in.
 
Good to hear they are doing well! We will be attempting to breed the TBS brains early in 2007, since you have two of them, you might be able to participate :)

If you are interested I can PM you with more details.

Brian
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8851081#post8851081 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by BrianPlankis
Good to hear they are doing well! We will be attempting to breed the TBS brains early in 2007, since you have two of them, you might be able to participate :)

If you are interested I can PM you with more details.

Brian

Im always up for experimentation! Drop me a PM.
 
Update:

After being in the tank for a couple of years, Lenny, my lawnmower Blenny went carpet or actually desk surfing today.

I found him dried up behind the tank. It is actually sad as he was an active and healthy fish.

In addition my skimmer sprung a leak.

Somedays......
 
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