And even an old timer can make mistakes. Like forgetting to routinely verify/calibrate your refractometer
Not that I'm an old timer but I have pods older than most members here. :worried:
I have not only made mistakes, I made all the mistakes but by doing that I learned from them. I have dealt with every disease known to man and some unknown ones. :hmm3:
I used to have dreams about ich and cycno. I almost changed my last name to bryopsis.:spin2:
And about calibrating refractometers, I don't own one and never have so I don't have to calibrate one.:reading:
For me, "old timer" equals someone with more than 10 years of experience in the hobby.
OMG ten years. I don't think I have any fish younger than that so I must be antique and too senile to post here. My hermit crabs have canker sores older than that.
Oh well, I guess I am an oooooold timer.:smokin:
About the basics though. It seems that the longer you do this, the less you have to rely on technology and test kits (which I also don't have any, but I used to)
I can tell from the expression on the fishes face what the parameters are so I don't worry about them. I touch the glass in the morning to test the temperature. That is my testing routine.:eek2:
If the animals are swimming around, unconcerned as well as spawning, I don't worry about it. If the fish die of old age or at least 15 years old, thats a sign everything is OK, If the corals are growing, no sweat. If nothing ever gets sick or dies, everything is perfect.

So to answer the original question, yes I do take a lot for granted, but it took fifty years of screwing up before I was able to do that and not screw up again.:beer:
So I was screwing up and now I am just screwed up.
