Marco dried rock or Live rock?

Elmareefer

New member
I’ve seen some conflicting things. Seems like Marco dried rock is the Jess expensive option that say live rock shipped overnight,. Just looking for the easiest option to be successful on my setup. Seems like the dried rock are for more seasoned guys as you have to add stuff to get the tank to cycle.

Am I overthinking this?
 
No, you have it correct.
Dead rock often has a name that suggests it is alive but it isnt. Live rock has been in a running system or the ocean and already has the bacteria and sometimes other things living in and on it. It should be handled and shipped like a living thing because it is.
Dead rock will go through several stages of growth of ugly stuff and generally takes 4 to 12 months before it starts to look like something you want in your tank.

You can use some of each and after 2 years they will all look the same.

Marco rock isnt dried. It is mined from ancient reefs and formations that were in the ocean a long time ago. Some dead rock is man made and shaped.
Live rock now was mined as well but then dumped in the ocean for a few years. No more destruction of reefs to get rock.
 
If you go with all Marco rock (as Ned mentioned, this is rock mined out of the ground that used to be ancient reefs) you can use a bottled bacteria product like Fritz Turbo Start to speed up the cycle. I've never used these but, @Dr. Reef has had good success with the Fritz product.
 
I’ve seen some conflicting things. Seems like Marco dried rock is the Jess expensive option that say live rock shipped overnight,. Just looking for the easiest option to be successful on my setup. Seems like the dried rock are for more seasoned guys as you have to add stuff to get the tank to cycle.

Am I overthinking this?
I have always used dry rock starts as good live rock is just out of scope where I am.

I always use Carib Sea Purple Rock as I don’t want to wait for this process. Purple looks mature from the start!

Saltwater, bacteria (a couple different brands) flow, heat, a week, and cycled. Add a fish or two, clowns are great first fish.

Then, each time you add something, it’s bacteria and micro-fauna become part of your system adding diversity which now populates itself, or be consumed by others.

I not had ugly problems provided I was diligent in maintaining my water chemistry.
 
I have added tanks with dead rock onto my running system. It grows ugly stuff because on blank rock whatever grows the fastest wins.
Water chemistry has nothing to do with it. Dead rock bring nothing to control what grows on it to the tank. The brown stuff has free reign for a while.
 
I have added tanks with dead rock onto my running system. It grows ugly stuff because on blank rock whatever grows the fastest wins.
Water chemistry has nothing to do with it. Dead rock bring nothing to control what grows on it to the tank. The brown stuff has free rein for a while.
IME the uglies love unstable water chemistry. The more, the better.

I like to keep a strict water chemistry regime.

If you have access to good ocean rock then sure, but there’s many this is not possible both logistically and financially.

But we CAN, limit the uglies by keeping environments they thrive in.

Or at least, for our group.

This is 100% dry rock.
IMG_1322.jpeg
 
IME the uglies love unstable water chemistry. The more, the better.

I like to keep a strict water chemistry regime.

If you have access to good ocean rock then sure, but there’s many this is not possible both logistically and financially.

But we CAN, limit the uglies by keeping environments they thrive in.

Or at least, for our group.

This is 100% dry rock.
View attachment 32415740
Nice!!
I’m looking to get Tampa rock so from what I read it’s good stuff

Being new is this the chart you follow?
 
Nice!!
I’m looking to get Tampa rock so from what I read it’s good stuff

Being new is this the chart you follow?
I just got some rocks from them and it was round cobblestone looking rock. I was very disappointed. It was my 4th order from them.
 
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