liverock
RC Sponsor
Feedback from a customer this week......
My husband and I have been behaving like substance abusers. We went from a fairly stabilized, late-phase cycled (but otherwise Spartan) aquarium, to what could now be described as Dr. Seuss's secret party pad. I am not exaggerating when I say we stared at that thing until 4 in the morning. I get up at 4 for my job, so that'll tell you just how whacko this bender was. We routinely fought over the mag light because we couldn't stop shining it at stuff. We kept an LED pen light handy for whichever one of us didn't snag the mag light in time. Plus we kept whipping out magnifying glasses and mobile phones just so we could see and capture every speck of every single solitary weirdo thing we could find. Bickered over who should check out whose discovery first. I understand what it must feel like to go on a crack bender. I slept 2 hours and then crawled back to the tank all bloody eyed and convinced I'd missed something new. I am not ordinarily an insomniac.
So how's it feel to be a crack dealer?
Anyway, later, when I got home and the hubster and I unpacked the boxes, all the little Dr. Seuss thingies were actually just fine and intact. Not even a smelly sponge combustion that needed scraping off, as I'd been prepared to deal with per your web site info. I sniffed every last rock, and it made me want to grab my bathing suit and find my way to the ocean. Those rocks were incredible to look at even inside the packing boxes. We took a whole mess of pictures. But then it turned out that the real show had yet to start. The slow bloom into Mega Fantastorama occurred after all the rocks went into the tank. Just incredible. There was this brilliant blue feather duster thingie on a perfectly landscaped algae mound. And don't even get me started on all the little coral thingies in that little surprise bag. Beautiful AND sassafrass. It was like they were walking around the tank. Plus clams and crabs and sponges and other feather dusters and barnacles and tunicates, plus other thingies I have yet to identify, We can't keep our noses off that aquarium glass.
Good! Realy really reaaallllllly good!

Thanks so much for setting us up with the magic. Never knew a tank could strut.
-R

My husband and I have been behaving like substance abusers. We went from a fairly stabilized, late-phase cycled (but otherwise Spartan) aquarium, to what could now be described as Dr. Seuss's secret party pad. I am not exaggerating when I say we stared at that thing until 4 in the morning. I get up at 4 for my job, so that'll tell you just how whacko this bender was. We routinely fought over the mag light because we couldn't stop shining it at stuff. We kept an LED pen light handy for whichever one of us didn't snag the mag light in time. Plus we kept whipping out magnifying glasses and mobile phones just so we could see and capture every speck of every single solitary weirdo thing we could find. Bickered over who should check out whose discovery first. I understand what it must feel like to go on a crack bender. I slept 2 hours and then crawled back to the tank all bloody eyed and convinced I'd missed something new. I am not ordinarily an insomniac.
So how's it feel to be a crack dealer?
Anyway, later, when I got home and the hubster and I unpacked the boxes, all the little Dr. Seuss thingies were actually just fine and intact. Not even a smelly sponge combustion that needed scraping off, as I'd been prepared to deal with per your web site info. I sniffed every last rock, and it made me want to grab my bathing suit and find my way to the ocean. Those rocks were incredible to look at even inside the packing boxes. We took a whole mess of pictures. But then it turned out that the real show had yet to start. The slow bloom into Mega Fantastorama occurred after all the rocks went into the tank. Just incredible. There was this brilliant blue feather duster thingie on a perfectly landscaped algae mound. And don't even get me started on all the little coral thingies in that little surprise bag. Beautiful AND sassafrass. It was like they were walking around the tank. Plus clams and crabs and sponges and other feather dusters and barnacles and tunicates, plus other thingies I have yet to identify, We can't keep our noses off that aquarium glass.
Good! Realy really reaaallllllly good!

Thanks so much for setting us up with the magic. Never knew a tank could strut.
-R