JokerGirl
Whistler's Mother
Hi there! I'm new, this is my first time posting. Been talking to fishgeeks for a couple days and he referred me to you guys.
I've been keeping freshwater fish for many many years, mainly Frontosa but decided to start a saltwater in a 90 gallon tall I had lying around. For my birthday, my Dad picked up everything I needed for my boyfriend and me to get it going.
Having to learn all new techniques, fish, and all the corals has been really overwhelming and although I love my LFS dearly, they always seem a bit too busy to truly help me learn the things I need to, thus why I'm here.
I'm currently using:
90 gallon tall tank (so it's only 48" long)
Pro-Clear 125g Sump
Pro-Clear Protein Skimmer (not sure of the pump size but I think it's a 500gph)
Mag-Drive Supreme 700gph
Coralife Compact Fluorescent lamp, 400W, 2 Actinic and 2 Full spectrum bulbs
200w Titanium heater
My boyfriend rigged up a freshwater drip out of a Faygo bottle for doing top offs
Coralife Pure-Flo II 24gpd RO
Also have about 80 pounds of live rock, and about 3-4" of sand in the bottom so it's good and deep (I'd love to keep mandarins at some point and heard the deep sand bed is the way to go if you're gonna have them)
Well, my tank has been up and running for about a month now and seems to be doing great. The corraline algae has really sprouted, I'm noticing lots of small feather dusters on the rock, more and more worms showing up in the sand, and the hermits that got stuck in some sand my LFS gave me have stayed alive through the cycling process somehow.
Last Friday, we picked up a couple Yellow-tailed Damsels kind of as tester fish to see if they'd survive or not. So far so good, they've been eating and really brightening up. Fishgeeks told me I'll probably have to get rid of them due to their aggressiveness, makes me kind of sad but I guess you gotta do whatcha gotta do.
Here's some progress photos of my tank. The first few were taken when we got everything set up
Sorry for the really long post but I'm eager to learn as much as possible.
Like I said, it's been running for a month now and seems to have stopped cycling. All the parameters have been very stable, the only thing I'm battling is some cyanobacteria but it's only been growing on the sand, and the couple snails I have seem to take care of that overnight fairly quickly.
Anyways, how much longer do you think I should wait before getting some coral? I know I don't have metal halides yet, but should be getting it for Xmas
Also, what should I look for in corals? I know that colour is a good indicator of health, but is there other things I should know as well? What should I go with first that is easy to keep, but that also has beautiful colour? fishgeeks suggested that I go with LPS first because I don't have metal halides, although I have fallen in love with Acorpora.
Everything I've been reading says that anenomes are fairly difficult to keep, is this true?
I'm trying to take things slow as I know the repercussions of rushing things will be more devastating that it is in a freshwater tank.
So many questions I havn't thought of yet, but any help would be greatly appreciated!!!!!
I've been keeping freshwater fish for many many years, mainly Frontosa but decided to start a saltwater in a 90 gallon tall I had lying around. For my birthday, my Dad picked up everything I needed for my boyfriend and me to get it going.
Having to learn all new techniques, fish, and all the corals has been really overwhelming and although I love my LFS dearly, they always seem a bit too busy to truly help me learn the things I need to, thus why I'm here.
I'm currently using:
90 gallon tall tank (so it's only 48" long)
Pro-Clear 125g Sump
Pro-Clear Protein Skimmer (not sure of the pump size but I think it's a 500gph)
Mag-Drive Supreme 700gph
Coralife Compact Fluorescent lamp, 400W, 2 Actinic and 2 Full spectrum bulbs
200w Titanium heater
My boyfriend rigged up a freshwater drip out of a Faygo bottle for doing top offs
Coralife Pure-Flo II 24gpd RO
Also have about 80 pounds of live rock, and about 3-4" of sand in the bottom so it's good and deep (I'd love to keep mandarins at some point and heard the deep sand bed is the way to go if you're gonna have them)
Well, my tank has been up and running for about a month now and seems to be doing great. The corraline algae has really sprouted, I'm noticing lots of small feather dusters on the rock, more and more worms showing up in the sand, and the hermits that got stuck in some sand my LFS gave me have stayed alive through the cycling process somehow.
Last Friday, we picked up a couple Yellow-tailed Damsels kind of as tester fish to see if they'd survive or not. So far so good, they've been eating and really brightening up. Fishgeeks told me I'll probably have to get rid of them due to their aggressiveness, makes me kind of sad but I guess you gotta do whatcha gotta do.
Here's some progress photos of my tank. The first few were taken when we got everything set up
Sorry for the really long post but I'm eager to learn as much as possible.
Like I said, it's been running for a month now and seems to have stopped cycling. All the parameters have been very stable, the only thing I'm battling is some cyanobacteria but it's only been growing on the sand, and the couple snails I have seem to take care of that overnight fairly quickly.
Anyways, how much longer do you think I should wait before getting some coral? I know I don't have metal halides yet, but should be getting it for Xmas
Everything I've been reading says that anenomes are fairly difficult to keep, is this true?
I'm trying to take things slow as I know the repercussions of rushing things will be more devastating that it is in a freshwater tank.
So many questions I havn't thought of yet, but any help would be greatly appreciated!!!!!