Turtle77
New member
Ok so alot of you read my post Getting a bigger tank!! and know that I got this sweet deal on a whole setup from someone who was moving and did not want to take thier 58Gallon Oceanic with them. Ok so I went to pick it up tonight. Now since I have not had a larger tank with all the extras my plan was to come over take pictures of the setup and draw a diagram so that I would know where everyhthing was setup and how everything hooked back up when I got this home.
OMG!!!!!!!!!!!!!
When I got there the guy had everything broken down already and all the hoses and pipes and EVERYTHING was just sitting in tubs. All these little pieces and clamps and stuff that I have NO clue where it goes. He drained ALL the water off and discarded it before I got there. He scooped out all the crushed coral live sand into a couple buckets. Then we couldnt get the tank out of the stand because of a couple pipes coming out the bottom so he removed with using a couple different pairs a plyers, I didnt get to see what the parts looked like he just chuncked them in bucket with some stuff. He took all the live rock out and wrapped it in dry newspaper and put it in a tub with no water at all. We loaded it ups one flight of stairs down a long hallway and down another flight of stairs. not to mention the ten steps to even get into the house itself.
Ok so now I am home with everything sitting in my garage and I am doing a little freaking out. Now I knew this wasnt going to be easy but I also had a plan to help myself that got ruined.
I am going to suck up the pride and ask for a little help. Everything needs cleaning up, and I mean EVERYTHING. But I can do that myself. Its hooking everything up to the right hoses and holes that I need help with and making sure the tank is put back together. I am worried about the live rock, how long can it stay like that. Theres like 60-70 pounds of it in a couple tubs out there and a couple buckets of live substrate.
I know that setting a tank up is the most boring part and the most work and its probably the part that no one wants to help out on but If your into that I could sure use it. Please pm me for my number. I live in LaVergne. I can do the work all you have to do is pretty much sit and point and answer a ton of questions.
thanks for listening
OMG!!!!!!!!!!!!!
When I got there the guy had everything broken down already and all the hoses and pipes and EVERYTHING was just sitting in tubs. All these little pieces and clamps and stuff that I have NO clue where it goes. He drained ALL the water off and discarded it before I got there. He scooped out all the crushed coral live sand into a couple buckets. Then we couldnt get the tank out of the stand because of a couple pipes coming out the bottom so he removed with using a couple different pairs a plyers, I didnt get to see what the parts looked like he just chuncked them in bucket with some stuff. He took all the live rock out and wrapped it in dry newspaper and put it in a tub with no water at all. We loaded it ups one flight of stairs down a long hallway and down another flight of stairs. not to mention the ten steps to even get into the house itself.
Ok so now I am home with everything sitting in my garage and I am doing a little freaking out. Now I knew this wasnt going to be easy but I also had a plan to help myself that got ruined.
I am going to suck up the pride and ask for a little help. Everything needs cleaning up, and I mean EVERYTHING. But I can do that myself. Its hooking everything up to the right hoses and holes that I need help with and making sure the tank is put back together. I am worried about the live rock, how long can it stay like that. Theres like 60-70 pounds of it in a couple tubs out there and a couple buckets of live substrate.
I know that setting a tank up is the most boring part and the most work and its probably the part that no one wants to help out on but If your into that I could sure use it. Please pm me for my number. I live in LaVergne. I can do the work all you have to do is pretty much sit and point and answer a ton of questions.
thanks for listening