Moving to Hawaii, need advice

andy.thompson12

New member
Hi all,

I just received my letter of acceptance to the marine biology program at University of Hawaii at Manoa. Although I am very excited to move there, I cannot bring my reef tank with me. I have a few options:

This is what my tank has:
Fish
*Yellow Tang
*2 Clownfish
*Royal Gramma
*1 green chromis

Inverts
*1 Brittle star
*1 cleaner shrimp
*5 hermit crabs
*snails
*derasa clam that went from 3 inches to 6 inches in 3 months

Coral:
*soft and SPS

My parents are retired so they don't want to extensively take care of a whole 55 gallon reef tank. But I would like to add that while attending University of Iowa for my freshman year my mom did a really good job of taking care of it when it was at home. Currently the tank sits in a laboratory in the biology department at Iowa. I am not too keen on selling everything so I am wondering on what to keep and what to sell. The biggest issue is having to make my parents feed the fish or dose every day. I was thinking I could just keep the tang so he could clean up the live rock, but will that be enough food? Is there anything else you would get rid of? I just don't want to start over again because the system I have right now is close to perfect. I haven't changed the water in 6 months.

thanks,

Andy
 

Attachments

  • Fish tank.jpg
    Fish tank.jpg
    42.3 KB · Views: 10
How long will you be in school and burdening your parents with your fish tank? Either way that doesn't matter, sell the tank and start a new one when YOU are able to take care of it.
 
i saw this thread on 3 reef and im going to give u the same answer and say sell all livestock and store everything else
 
Tough luck.. Coral that is not from Hawaii is illegal. Clams too. All are not allowed. Best to sell all and rebuild.
 
Last edited:
If you dont have the ability to keep your tank, sell it, or the live stock and see if you can stick it in your parents attic untill you return.
 
What you need to do is tell UOH thank you for accepting you, but you are going to respectfully decline, and tell them you have the perfect reef tank in IOWA and it needs you to take care of it….
 
I have to agree with those who say to pick up a mask. Nothing beats seeing it in person. I went to Hawaii quite a few times when I was a kid, and well into my teens, and while I was college (have relatives ob Oahu and Maui). There have been times when all I did was put on a mask and just stuck my head in the water. There's something magical about seeing fish we normally see in fish stores in their natural environment. I seriously doubt you'd miss your tank. When you come back, I can almost guarantee that you'll want to set it up differently anyway.
 
Hate to agree with everyone else here but sell everything living keep what equipment you may want to use that won't be out dated in a few years and clean the heck out of it before you toss it in storage then enjoy your trip to Hawaii you lucky bastard
 
What is so perfect about this tank?

I don't want to put words in anyone's mouth, but in the interest of being charitable until cherub gets on here and confirms or says otherwise, I will. Its possible this statement came out wrong.

I think a perfectly reasonable question would be to ask what parts of your system make you happy. Information about what you consider perfect and what you did to get there would be useful both as a set of helpful ideas, which is what this forum is all about, and as a basis for helping you determine what, if anything, you want to keep.

That said, go, enjoy Hawaii and the program you just got accepted to. Get the mask.
 
Back
Top