bored4long
New member
I went to look at an acrylic tank today and the guy gave me his old LR (now base rock) along with a Sea Clone HOB skimmer with MaxiJet 1200 and a remote temp display. Pretty nice considering I didn't even buy his tank.
So my question is, what do I do now?
Is there any way to season/cure this rock and allow it to cycle outside of my tank, say in a garbage can? There is a lot of dead matter on the rock (see pictures below). I was thinking maybe I could put this rock along with a little LR in a garbage can with a pump for circulation and a HOB skimmer for skimming and just forget about it. Would the LR seed the base rock over time? If so, how much time. Is a light source needed during this process?
Here is some info from MarcoRocks.com:
Thank for the help,
Mark
So my question is, what do I do now?
Is there any way to season/cure this rock and allow it to cycle outside of my tank, say in a garbage can? There is a lot of dead matter on the rock (see pictures below). I was thinking maybe I could put this rock along with a little LR in a garbage can with a pump for circulation and a HOB skimmer for skimming and just forget about it. Would the LR seed the base rock over time? If so, how much time. Is a light source needed during this process?
Here is some info from MarcoRocks.com:
We do not recommend our rock or any other rock right into an established tank.
Even though Marco Rocks has been washed and dried it will still have some trapped organic material that will break down and need to cycle before it is safe to use in your tank...when cycling your Marco Rocks simply add a cup of live sand and a small amount of live rock from an established tank to your tank. The ammonia being produced by the trapped organic material in your new dry rock will feed the beneficial bacteria and organisms as they grow in numbers and colonize your new rock (We use and recommend a nitrifying bacteria product by Fritz (turbo start 900) to help boost this). During this time you should monitor ammonia, nitrite and nitrate. You will first see ammonia spike, then nitrite and finally nitrate. Once you see ammonia and nitrite stable at -0- or very near -0- and nitrate on a steady decline, your rock is considered “cycledâ€Â. During this cycle time we recommend frequent water changes, aggressive skimming and turbulent water flow.
Thank for the help,
Mark


