Making Rocks, Rocks

TheOtherDB

New member
Okay, so, a year in the making thus far ...

I work as, among other things, an automation technician for a company that builds concrete batching/blending plants. Something I didn't know until I started working there a couple of years back is that, chemically, concrete is similar to live rock or coral reef skeletons (limestone, calcium carbonate).

Imagine my shock!

So, not so new news, I found a plethora of content - blogs, DIY videos, yada, yada - out there, but it was new and exciting to me.

Last spring I launched into making my own reef rock.

The recipe is simple: coral sand and cement - crushed shells or coral to further enhance structure/texture if you have it. I've never really measured ratios, I've just kind of winged it until I had goo that looked like it would do what I wanted ... be stiff enough (slump) to hold up to some random shape, and allow me to keep gaping holes in the overall piece while not breaking apart into crumbs when hardened. NOTE: More cement is better.

I kept the finished "first batch" in fresh water that was changed out periodically until pH settled into something that was not pegged at purple.

About 3-4 months ago, I moved the rocks into spent reef tank water that I siphoned from my 34 gallon RedSea during water changes to further simmer (a figure of speech, no heat was applied ... k, now the lawyers are happy) the hand made rocks.

Today! Today, I have moved these rocks, after about 9 months from their birth, to a heated, filtered, honest to goodness, surrounded by glass so I can see it all happen, tank!

Is that awesome, or what? :celeb1:

Okay, I'm better now. :)

I have plans to let things stew a bit, then slowly, monitoring chemistry carefully, introduce some rock from a living tank. Stew some more. Taking one step at a time, adding maybe some zoas ... a small fish ... then ... ?

I know, half of you are yawning. But to me, coming from some old school reefing that dates back to the 80s where live rock came from Florida or Fiji at $14 a pound, this is pretty cool stuff, and I am excited to see how it all turns out.

Home made live rock ... geeeg! Who knew? :D
 
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These are photos, taken just minutes after filling the tank.
 
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Ali ...
I am about a year into this, so I'm trading time for dollars, but my main reason for venturing into this is to be able to make designed shapes. The lumps in my photos are just piled without any plan for aesthetics at this point. ...and I wanted to learn something.

I suppose if I made a few tons of the stuff, cost effectiveness may be an added benefit. But, a one year investment for my poultry 20 pounds of ugly lumps? ... dunno.

The main thing is that I am having fun! :D
 
Ideally, I visualize something with narrow bottom "legs" or pillars that will hold the entire structure off of the substrate, then random horizontal-ish "shelves" in tiers or layers to allow placing animals in a range of depths commensurate with their particular needs.

finding-nemo-coral-reef-wallpaper.jpg
 
I'm sure that will look cool when it's done. I like the use of negative space my self. Don't forget to use the rule of thirds when putting your scape in.
 
I'm sure that will look cool when it's done. I like the use of negative space my self. Don't forget to use the rule of thirds when putting your scape in.
Rule of thirds? I haven't heard this rule before what is it?

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G870A using Tapatalk
 
There is a universal, some call it a golden rule, "balance" to design that says, structure the frame in thirds. For example, put a horizon 1/3 up from the bottom of the frame in a photograph, or a tree 1/3 from the right of the frame ... so on ... breaking each segment of the overall composition into discrete thirds. Voila! :)

Who knew life was so complicated? I'll wager 33%. :D
 
SFish ..

I just saw the link to videos that you posted. That was very cool!
Now, I can have the lost city of Atlantis in my living room!
The neighbors will REALLY be impressed! :D

PS: Anyone know where I can get a ZPM?
 
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There is a universal, some call it a golden rule, "balance" to design that says, structure the frame in thirds. For example, put a horizon 1/3 up from the bottom of the frame in a photograph, or a tree 1/3 from the right of the frame ... so on ... breaking each segment of the overall composition into discrete thirds. Voila! :)

Who knew life was so complicated? I'll wager 33%. :D
Thanks

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G870A using Tapatalk
 
SFish ...
Thanks! :)
More pictures, day II:

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Ph still high at about 8.4, but improving a little at a time. Everything else is at zero.

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The angular piece is just some cement residue that was chipped of an old, used concrete plant. It reminded me of rock sold as being from Fiji back in the 80s. Surely not as porous, but I figured, what the heck? I can always toss it out.
 
By using 1/3rds it makes you look around more. You see the over all tank better. The worst thing you can do is put your point of focus in the center. Another thing you can do is add some taller items to the foreground. Don't have the background as the tallest rock work in the tank.

http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2217633

There are some REALLY nice aquascapes in the thread you posted. I especially liked the very "archy" and "shelfy" designs ... now, all I need is a canvas!
 
My concrete rockscape

<a href="http://s1062.photobucket.com/user/karimwassef/media/5C8CBCA9-23C4-473C-9FDA-CEEF0BC64A8C_zps4q8tnm4j.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1062.photobucket.com/albums/t496/karimwassef/5C8CBCA9-23C4-473C-9FDA-CEEF0BC64A8C_zps4q8tnm4j.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo 5C8CBCA9-23C4-473C-9FDA-CEEF0BC64A8C_zps4q8tnm4j.jpg"></a>

<a href="http://s1062.photobucket.com/user/karimwassef/media/5EB456F6-8E3E-4F0B-A4F9-970CBD6B303A_zpssz7ssb8a.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1062.photobucket.com/albums/t496/karimwassef/5EB456F6-8E3E-4F0B-A4F9-970CBD6B303A_zpssz7ssb8a.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo 5EB456F6-8E3E-4F0B-A4F9-970CBD6B303A_zpssz7ssb8a.jpg"></a>

And today

<a href="http://s1062.photobucket.com/user/karimwassef/media/888E4E2E-E921-4836-ADE5-0A80CE22D335_zpsnk2fduzu.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1062.photobucket.com/albums/t496/karimwassef/888E4E2E-E921-4836-ADE5-0A80CE22D335_zpsnk2fduzu.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo 888E4E2E-E921-4836-ADE5-0A80CE22D335_zpsnk2fduzu.jpg"></a>

<a href="http://s1062.photobucket.com/user/karimwassef/media/4A261F16-3008-4CFA-B046-391D6D9C3977_zps6ftrjkvz.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1062.photobucket.com/albums/t496/karimwassef/4A261F16-3008-4CFA-B046-391D6D9C3977_zps6ftrjkvz.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo 4A261F16-3008-4CFA-B046-391D6D9C3977_zps6ftrjkvz.jpg"></a>
 
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