shearwater
New member
Omchris, good luck, and please keep us posted on your progress!
Except for the bickering, this is a great thread. I was wondering if it would be appropriate to "hitchhike" on it, pun intended -- I have almost the same problem as Omchris. Below is an email which I sent to TBS 2 days ago. I appreciate your thoughts ...
"Recently while vacationing in Tampa (Feb. 21), I stopped in to purchase 25 lb. of premium/coral live rock at your store. I'd been reading the excellent reports of TBS rock on reefcentral and simply had to get some myself (my plan is to add it to the 25 lbs of live rock already in my 30 gal setup).
I've had a lot of problems with the curing of my TBS live rock, and was hoping you have some suggestions. Your folks packed it in the standard shipping box with water and a heat pack. The problems started with USAirways, who handled your box very roughly on my flight to Manchester NH. As the box came down the baggage carousel, I was dismayed to see that it was
soaked!! During transit, the rock had punctured the double plastic bag and it lost almost all the water. Additionally, the styrofoam cracked. I estimate it could have been out of water for 10+ hours. I tried to file a claim with USAirways, but they pointed to a written policy that fragile and perishable items were not covered!
Since 2/21, I have been curing it in a 10 gallon quarantine tank. There has been a lot of die-off. The tube worms were the first to go, then 2 oysters, followed by a nice orange tunicate. The "sea-pork" also (which was the one organism we really didn't care about), and now also the tube coral is looking like it probably won't make it (mostly white with only small brown centers), a nice brain coral is half dead, and even the barnacles are dying. Surprisingly, some of the light-brown sponges are still OK.
I should add that I keep it at 74 deg. F, 1.023 S.G., filtered with a
Penguin 125 hang-on, fluorescent lit, and every day I change 50% of the water and remove or siphon off dead tissue. I swap the protein skimmer between my main tank and th 10g every other day. I've gone through two 50-gal bags of Instant Ocean mix.
This has been going on for 3 weeks now, and I'm not sure I'll have anything left once the die-off is over! Is there anything I'm doing wrong? It's been so disappointing; everyone else is really happy with your product and all the extra hitchhikers it normally carries, but our rocks are looking like dead rocks, and I'm really afraid to put it into my main tank (definitely not yet).
Any suggestions are greatly appreciated! Thanks"
Except for the bickering, this is a great thread. I was wondering if it would be appropriate to "hitchhike" on it, pun intended -- I have almost the same problem as Omchris. Below is an email which I sent to TBS 2 days ago. I appreciate your thoughts ...
"Recently while vacationing in Tampa (Feb. 21), I stopped in to purchase 25 lb. of premium/coral live rock at your store. I'd been reading the excellent reports of TBS rock on reefcentral and simply had to get some myself (my plan is to add it to the 25 lbs of live rock already in my 30 gal setup).
I've had a lot of problems with the curing of my TBS live rock, and was hoping you have some suggestions. Your folks packed it in the standard shipping box with water and a heat pack. The problems started with USAirways, who handled your box very roughly on my flight to Manchester NH. As the box came down the baggage carousel, I was dismayed to see that it was
soaked!! During transit, the rock had punctured the double plastic bag and it lost almost all the water. Additionally, the styrofoam cracked. I estimate it could have been out of water for 10+ hours. I tried to file a claim with USAirways, but they pointed to a written policy that fragile and perishable items were not covered!
Since 2/21, I have been curing it in a 10 gallon quarantine tank. There has been a lot of die-off. The tube worms were the first to go, then 2 oysters, followed by a nice orange tunicate. The "sea-pork" also (which was the one organism we really didn't care about), and now also the tube coral is looking like it probably won't make it (mostly white with only small brown centers), a nice brain coral is half dead, and even the barnacles are dying. Surprisingly, some of the light-brown sponges are still OK.
I should add that I keep it at 74 deg. F, 1.023 S.G., filtered with a
Penguin 125 hang-on, fluorescent lit, and every day I change 50% of the water and remove or siphon off dead tissue. I swap the protein skimmer between my main tank and th 10g every other day. I've gone through two 50-gal bags of Instant Ocean mix.
This has been going on for 3 weeks now, and I'm not sure I'll have anything left once the die-off is over! Is there anything I'm doing wrong? It's been so disappointing; everyone else is really happy with your product and all the extra hitchhikers it normally carries, but our rocks are looking like dead rocks, and I'm really afraid to put it into my main tank (definitely not yet).
Any suggestions are greatly appreciated! Thanks"
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