Jordan asked me to post this, so here it goes
Well lets see, I knew that chysopterus are known for brook so I used my 29 for a QT.
List of stuff I had in the QT.
air stone
pvc pipes..these were soon replaced with a fake aquascape.
heater
power head
aquaclear for filtration
I did water changes once every three days.
At first I had live rock and sand in there but then was told by RS that its bad to have live rock and sand in the QT.
The reasons are
you can't dose any meds,
rocks and sand absorb meds,
you could kill what is alive in the rocks and sand,
and these things in the tank could make the copper treatment toxic.
A week after I received the fish, they started showing signs of ich. I did all the other natural treatments but they didn't work. I was told by many clown owners that cupramine is safe for sensitive fish and very affective. I had to do some thing, my poor fish were suffering.
I bought a salifert copper tester, measured the cupramine in ML not drops. I dosed the tank to the reccomended concentration of 0.5 mg/L over a couple of days. Then I started to notice the fish were getting relief in a couple of hours. In a few days they were spot free.
I was only suppose to keep them in the QT for 8 weeks. Its to make sure the fish are completely ich free.
Just when it was getting close to the time to add them to the 120. The middle plastic brace of my 120 had a crack in it and was about to let go. So we put all the fish in a new 56gallon. The 120 was replaced, then we put the rock and the corals back in the tank. Thats when I decided it was a great time to make sure the 120 didn't have any ich or other parasites in it. So for 8 weeks our 120 went fishless. 4 months waiting..it would have been only 2 months if I had the 56 gallon before I bought the chrysopterus. Looks like I didn't have to worry about ich in the display tank after all that. Because.. none of my fish showed any signs of parasites through the whole quarantine process. Oh well..better safe than sorry
