Aquarist007
New member
quote:
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Originally posted by conorwynne
OK, can you exaplain what you mean?
I have been cooking LR for almost a year now in my garden shed, running lots of powerheads and temperature kept at 26C for the entire time.
Last week I decided to do a 100% WC -- moved it to another pre-heated dustbin (swapped around my mixing bins you see -- and inspected the LR.
All the bubble algae was completely gone (as you would expect after a year in darkness) and the LR is very clean and white looking -- some coraline still hanging on amazingly.
So is my LR alive or dead? It has never been out of water for longer than 5 minutes, and it was from my old tank which I no longer have. I had a disaster after my months holiday in France. The auto-top off went nuts and I almost lost all my livestock. Almost but not quite.
So is it alive or dead? Surely alive? Should I start dosing it now with some vodka? Do I need to? Should I seed it with a piece of LR from my main tank?
Very confused....
Conor - subscribing in anticipation of your answer lads.
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I would think that it contains the bacteria involved in saying that it is live rock, capable of offering filtration. I was referring to dead rock as the rock that has been in my friends garage dry for a year. This rock contains lots of death, while yours doesnt. If you are ready to prepare it to put in the tank, and 1 year is long enough to cook, you can seed with live rock from your main tank for coralline, but i would just put it in and seed it that way, as long as your readings are in the norm.
If you want to speed up the process of getting coralline on the rock, scrape your glass really well, including the back glass, and the coralline pieces will spread throughout the tank, and spread fast.
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Originally posted by conorwynne
OK, can you exaplain what you mean?
I have been cooking LR for almost a year now in my garden shed, running lots of powerheads and temperature kept at 26C for the entire time.
Last week I decided to do a 100% WC -- moved it to another pre-heated dustbin (swapped around my mixing bins you see -- and inspected the LR.
All the bubble algae was completely gone (as you would expect after a year in darkness) and the LR is very clean and white looking -- some coraline still hanging on amazingly.
So is my LR alive or dead? It has never been out of water for longer than 5 minutes, and it was from my old tank which I no longer have. I had a disaster after my months holiday in France. The auto-top off went nuts and I almost lost all my livestock. Almost but not quite.
So is it alive or dead? Surely alive? Should I start dosing it now with some vodka? Do I need to? Should I seed it with a piece of LR from my main tank?
Very confused....
Conor - subscribing in anticipation of your answer lads.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I would think that it contains the bacteria involved in saying that it is live rock, capable of offering filtration. I was referring to dead rock as the rock that has been in my friends garage dry for a year. This rock contains lots of death, while yours doesnt. If you are ready to prepare it to put in the tank, and 1 year is long enough to cook, you can seed with live rock from your main tank for coralline, but i would just put it in and seed it that way, as long as your readings are in the norm.
If you want to speed up the process of getting coralline on the rock, scrape your glass really well, including the back glass, and the coralline pieces will spread throughout the tank, and spread fast.
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