heathlindner25
New member
Looks like Justin tapped out ?
it sounds to me like I need two fully operating 40 gallon aquariums with filters and heaters, and ohhh ARGHHHH WHY!!! i tried so hard and listened to so many peoples advice and LFS profesionals (who i guess screwed me) The hell with ELMERS, wet pets never sold me a bad fish!
Elmers ruined my aquarium! Why did nobody tell me to QUARANTINE and build a tank and oh just forget it!
over 3K and this is what i get! meh
There is very likely to be a reef club in Pittsburgh. Let me look. Yep: here is a link to their thread and by all appearances it is an active, healthy club. These are people local to you that you can talk with and that can help you. Somebody in the club might even have a tank to lend. http://reefcentral.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=181
Why do you need two new fish tanks, power heads etc? Just buy two of these: http://www.homedepot.com/p/Sterilite-Latching-64-Qt-Storage-Box-14978006/206721480
An air pump, air stones, and two cheap heaters. And some random 1 or 1.5 inch pvc connectors. Thats all. You can set up a TTM system for $50. After TTM is done, you just make sure to do large water changes and keep prime handy to keep ammonia at bay while you wait out the remaining time for Ich to die off in the DT.
You throw a small rant in here about no one telling you what needs to be done, but this site has a ton of stickies, and as you introduced yourself as 37, you can be an adult and do some research. You should have prior to starting. But here we are, I know that is a bit harsh, and honestly everyone here wants to help, but got to help yourself as well. Everyone is telling you no ich treatment is reef safe, you worry about spending money yet still buy some? It doubtfully won't help more than just feeding the fish well would. Probably spent half of what a full TTM set up could cost you.
Also, should probably fix your timeline. Your first post here on 4/5 said the tank was coming in that day. How was it cycled for a month and a half?
You should be open to both advice and some constructive criticism. I personally would tell you the same in person. You are open about how much you spent, that's fine. However having made a decision to keep animals, and spend that much, research should have been done prior, that's what the stickies on this site are for. There is a ton there.
Its been about 48 hrs since this thread has started. You've been presented options, and hopefully have read up on your own regarding treatment. Probably time to take action. You could:
1) Do nothing, there are those on here that don't QT, and fully acknowledge their tanks have ich. A healthy fish should be able to survive ich without much issue. Your tank is relatively new, and fish are stressed from recent moves, probably not a good choice.
By your description it really is ich, unless you're looking so hard with good eyesight you see the slight glisten some fish skin/scales have. And with the good care you describe, you're very likely to become quite good at this. Let me give you a little advice on water: first, dose until you reach the conditions in my sig line. Those readings are good for fish and lps coral and will tend to stay stable until and unless you have a stony coral (lps or sps) or a clam sucking calcium out of the water. Once stony coral begins to feed, (they often come in shocky and take a while) you can supplement calcium, and when you get to where you can't supplement it fast enough, you can add lime powder to your topoff water (ro/di) and that will automate the process. Any member of the club can show you how to rig this. Sounds as if you've got a good system, and it'll work. Ich is nasty, but it isn't a calamity if you have the smarts to get your water in balance and help your fish keep their slime coats in good condition. Think of it as more like fleas than a disease, and the slime coat is the fishy equivalent of a flea collar.
Joining the club is your route to help, the loan of equipment, and good info---not to mention occasional coral frags and such traded about. A good move.
You shouldn't keep any corals without knowing Alk, Calc, and Mag. They are important for most any coral. Nitrates as well. Now that your tank is cycled, nitrite tests are pointless. PH, you can measure, but it really isn't a big number to care about, unless you are having major issues with it.
LPS is large polyp stony. Biggest thing is knowing what corals you actually bought. Can you identify the corals you have?
You shouldn't keep any corals without knowing Alk, Calc, and Mag. They are important for most any coral. Nitrates as well. Now that your tank is cycled, nitrite tests are pointless. PH, you can measure, but it really isn't a big number to care about, unless you are having major issues with it.
LPS is large polyp stony. Biggest thing is knowing what corals you actually bought. Can you identify the corals you have?
Coral 1= Duncan
Coral 2= zoanthids
Duncans are among the easiest stony corals to keep. Zoas in general are pretty easy too, provided good parameters and lighting, which you should have.