I like to read. One day while reading a magazine I exhausted all the freshwater content and decided to read back through it and hit the saltwater content. First thing I read was about pistol/goby pairs. I had to learn more. Enter Reef Central. I'll have you know that the massive backlog of old threads are a wonderful place for someone like me. I search something interesting and can click through pages and pages of opinions and facts on a particular subject. I began planning how too turn my then discus tank into a saltwater tank.
It's a terrible picture, but you get the idea of their colors. They were gorgeous!
Anyway I read a thread there on local fish stores. Enter Jason's Tropical Reef Fish Store! I basically went there to check it out. Look at livestock in person and such. I wasn't disappointed. Jason was super helpful and full of advice, including Socalireefs.
My husband helped me build a stand. We used plans developed by an engineer here on RC. Neither of us are particularly adept at building things with wood, so we probably wasted a little more materials and did things a little harder than another with experience would have.
The doors are mounted with drawer slides. I'm sure it's not that big of a leap for most of you to make, but for Johnny and me it was a break through. We wracked our little brains trying to think of a way to mount doors that would slide smoothly across the front. The 'aha!' moment was satisfying.
Johnny says we could park my car on it. I feel pretty good about it.
With the stand built I hit a snag. We had a chance to buy a house so we jumped on it. Reef tank on hold. Bought house. Renovated house extensively. New paint all over, new carpet, tear down nasty popcorn ceiling, install 2 new toilets, new water heater, run plumbing for washing machine to be inside instead of outside under house (seriously?). We sort of sat for a week or two in a kind of catatonic state after that. And then my husband that I love dearly said to me, "so what do you need to finish that tank?" So I ordered a glass hole saw, he bought me plumbing parts and glass for baffles and overflow and I started poking holes in my tank.
The first hole plug.
The water corraling contraption.
And the first hole! I was very proud. It only took me 1 hour and 45 minutes. Ya. I have since discovered that going as fast as my little drill will go is ok after I get the initial groove and that still only got me down to about 30 minutes. I also had a hole that took me 2 hours. I suspect that my drill bit is of inferior quality.
Sump baffles were easy, and the first thing I've ever done with silicone. I got some little bubbles but I'm not terribly upset about them.
And the finished sump!

It's a terrible picture, but you get the idea of their colors. They were gorgeous!
Anyway I read a thread there on local fish stores. Enter Jason's Tropical Reef Fish Store! I basically went there to check it out. Look at livestock in person and such. I wasn't disappointed. Jason was super helpful and full of advice, including Socalireefs.
My husband helped me build a stand. We used plans developed by an engineer here on RC. Neither of us are particularly adept at building things with wood, so we probably wasted a little more materials and did things a little harder than another with experience would have.

The doors are mounted with drawer slides. I'm sure it's not that big of a leap for most of you to make, but for Johnny and me it was a break through. We wracked our little brains trying to think of a way to mount doors that would slide smoothly across the front. The 'aha!' moment was satisfying.

Johnny says we could park my car on it. I feel pretty good about it.

With the stand built I hit a snag. We had a chance to buy a house so we jumped on it. Reef tank on hold. Bought house. Renovated house extensively. New paint all over, new carpet, tear down nasty popcorn ceiling, install 2 new toilets, new water heater, run plumbing for washing machine to be inside instead of outside under house (seriously?). We sort of sat for a week or two in a kind of catatonic state after that. And then my husband that I love dearly said to me, "so what do you need to finish that tank?" So I ordered a glass hole saw, he bought me plumbing parts and glass for baffles and overflow and I started poking holes in my tank.

The first hole plug.

The water corraling contraption.

And the first hole! I was very proud. It only took me 1 hour and 45 minutes. Ya. I have since discovered that going as fast as my little drill will go is ok after I get the initial groove and that still only got me down to about 30 minutes. I also had a hole that took me 2 hours. I suspect that my drill bit is of inferior quality.
Sump baffles were easy, and the first thing I've ever done with silicone. I got some little bubbles but I'm not terribly upset about them.

And the finished sump!
