Newbie....wanted to introduce myself

Honks69

New member
Hello everyone,
I just recently inherited an established 75 gallon fish tank. It only has a few fish and coral but a lot of live rock and small invertebrates mostly snails and hermit crabs. From what I can tell the corals are all leather corals and then I also have a few green/brown mushrooms.

I live south of Pittsburgh just off of Route 70 in a small town called Speers.

I have had freshwater tanks for the last 15 years and I always wanted a saltwater tank. Now that I finally got a established tank for free I am very excited to keep my tank up and running and I would like to hopefully add more coral and invertebrates.

-Chris
 
Welcome Chris! I'm right up the road in Charleroi!

The Pittsburgh area has lots of experienced reef keepers, so if you ever have any questions, ask away! If you really get into the hobby, you might also want to consider joining the Pittsburgh Marine Aquarium Society, which has monthly presentations/meetings, frag swaps, and raffles ( www.pmasi.org )

Anyway, good to know other people in the area who are in the same hobby! Good luck with the new tank!
 
Chris,

I have some button polyps, yellow polyps, palys, zoas, green mushrooms and pompon xenia that you're welcome to have if you're interested. Several of the guys here (Brett, Ray and Jared) helped me get started last year when I was broke due to cutbacks at work, so I'm happy to give some back.

John
 
Welcome Chris! I'm right up the road in Charleroi!

The Pittsburgh area has lots of experienced reef keepers, so if you ever have any questions, ask away! If you really get into the hobby, you might also want to consider joining the Pittsburgh Marine Aquarium Society, which has monthly presentations/meetings, frag swaps, and raffles ( www.pmasi.org )

Anyway, good to know other people in the area who are in the same hobby! Good luck with the new tank!

I never would have expected someone this close to be a member on this forum.

Nice to meet you. Are you a member of the PMAS? I found that website when I googled and found this forum. Also i purchased some live rock from a lady that told me she was a member but was moving and thats why she was selling her tank contents.
 
Chris,

I have some button polyps, yellow polyps, palys, zoas, green mushrooms and pompon xenia that you're welcome to have if you're interested. Several of the guys here (Brett, Ray and Jared) helped me get started last year when I was broke due to cutbacks at work, so I'm happy to give some back.

John

John,
I would love any of those. The only thing I want to do before I add anything else is the tank i inherited looks like the substrate is normal white aquarium gravel. The lady that gave it to me said it was crushed coral but it does not look like it. I got the tank for free so I cant really complain. From all of my research I would like to switch to sand.

Does anyone know wheres the best place to get sand at locally?

I have like 100 lbs of live rock so i dont think i need live sand and hopefully over time my rock seeds the sand.

Thanks and when i get my sand switched I would love to take you up on your offer.
 
Chris,

Yes, I'm a member of the PMAS and it's a good group to join, for the discount at LFSs if nothing else. Of course, trading stuff and learning from everyone is fun, too.

I found this site a year ago via Google, too. If you look at my first posts, you'll see I was basically in the the same place as you a year ago. We all start somewhere.

What you have may be crushed aragonite (I believe the technical term for crushed coral), it's very good for running in a reef tank as it helps stabilize some water parameters and give some of the pods, worms, etc more places to live and do their jobs. I use about a 50/50 mix of crashed aragonite and (CaribSea?) aragonite sand in both of my tanks without issue. I use the sand to help create a deep sand bed which also helps a bit with filtration (at least for about 10 years, from what I've read - my one tank is 5+ years old without any issues). Anyways, if the rocks are pretty rough looking, that may be what you have and a mix might be a good way to go (completely up to personal taste, of course). Also depends on if you want to keep anything that burrows (i.e. a lot of gobies, jawfish, etc), they typically have an easier time if there's some gravel mixed in.

Most pet stores sell sand, but if you don't have your heart set on anything specific you could try looking for play sand that is aragonite (not silicate). You'll want to research this a bit and call around. If I remember correctly I checked around and couldn't find any that was confirmed to be aragonite, so went the LFS route (Wet Pets, in my case).

Also, yes, if you already have live rock, it will in turn create live sand. Same for any additional (dead) rock you add to the tank - give it time and it too will become "live". I did this with both of my tanks - everything "dead" except 1 piece of live rock, let the tank go fallow for the first 6 - 9 months (not counting hermits & snails) just running actinics and the creatures that make everything "live" spread to everything. Much cheaper going that route, just takes patience and learning to enjoy watching the little guys.

No rush on the corals, but if it's going to be a while I'll probably end up donating them to the PMAS raffles next month. Feel free to PM me when you're ready and I'll see what I have at that time. They're all hardy types, so I wouldn't be too worried about having things perfect. Even being out of the tank for a day (as long as they're in tank water) wouldn't faze them too much. These were the ones I started with and believe me I wasn't doing things perfectly at that time, but they survived.

John
 
I'm going to be moving a client's tank tomorrow and will be using new sand. If you have the $$ but not the time, using new pre-rinsed sand is much easier than cleaning out the old stuff. Any time you disrupt a sandbed, all kinds of nasties get out, and it can make a cycle for a moved tank twice as bad. That said, it's perfectly decent sand, and would be totally fine to use if you rinsed and dried it out a bit before using it yourself. I'm a little ways from you, but find myself in Monessen/Rostraver about once or twice a week for work, so I could meet up with you sometime. I'm usually over that way early in the morning.
 
I'm going to be moving a client's tank tomorrow and will be using new sand. If you have the $$ but not the time, using new pre-rinsed sand is much easier than cleaning out the old stuff. Any time you disrupt a sandbed, all kinds of nasties get out, and it can make a cycle for a moved tank twice as bad. That said, it's perfectly decent sand, and would be totally fine to use if you rinsed and dried it out a bit before using it yourself. I'm a little ways from you, but find myself in Monessen/Rostraver about once or twice a week for work, so I could meet up with you sometime. I'm usually over that way early in the morning.

Thanks for the offer. I guess I have been rethinking what I want to do and so far my water has been near perfect and I guess before i go tearing my whole tank down I will wait and see if things change. If i got your sand and cleaned it now would I be able to store it for later use? If this is a bad idea then i will not do it. Thanks again.
 
Just figured i would drop by and say hello to the locals around pittsburgh! Im pretty new to this hobby and website as well and im already obsessed with it (girlfriend is jealous lol) i would love to meet local reefers in the area and im always looking for new coral to add to the tank! Looking forward to hearing from locals! : )
 
I work in Robinson, and AquaWorld is only about 15 minutes away (I went there on my lunch break today, as a matter of fact). They have a lot of cool stuff in their $5 frag tank, as well as the rest of their tanks.

If you have any interest in the corals I listed above for Honks69, just let me know. I'm more than happy to share some of my starter corals with another beginning reefer. I was shown a great deal of kindness when I first started (and still am, for that matter), so I'm more than happy to pass the favor along.

John
 
I actually buy most of my stuff from aquaworld as well. They have some corals that a lot of other places never will have. i purchased a nice black sun coral colony from them just the other day and the things are going crazy when i turn the lights off! Im always looking to add new and exciting coral and soon enough im going to get a bigger tank. I appreciate you helping me out, thanks a lot!
 
Back
Top