Photos of my 125 gallon reef tank - 20 years history

luisgo

Member
One of the challenges in this hobby is to keep a tank long term. Some people have great tanks and after two or three years they are gone. There are many reasons for this. Sometimes are economical problems, moving from one place to another, health problems, just I don't like it anymore, or too much work to keep the tank.

For me this hobby is passion, like a long term experiment, like a balancing act. After 20 years I am not sure what to do if my tank was not there to put my hands in the water. I started when I was 33 and today I am 53 year old.

This year my tank will be 20 years old and I want to share some photos. One of my favorite hobbies is photography and I am presenting photos of my tank during those 20 years.

The original tank was setup in December 1990. As you can see from the photos I have lost many corals but the live rock I have today is the same from 1990!. In the last four years I have been successful in keeping corals for several years. We have to remember that information during the 90's was not available as it is today with the internet. There was no Reef Central to ask for help.

During those years I had several incidents.

On June 1994 a canister filter leak emptied 50% of the water in the tank. Many corals were exposed to the air and died.

On September 1996 a hurricane hit the island of Puerto Rico where I live and there was no power for seven days. 12 volts bilge pumps used in boats connected to my car battery maintained the tank.

On 1998 I changed my 100 to a 125 gallon because of scratches in the glass.

On 2004 during a two weeks vacation out of my house. A decrease in salinity resulted from an overflow of the skimmer. The reverse osmosis float was connected to the sump and added a lot of freshwater to the tank. Now I have only a 5 gallon top-off system to avoid this.

During the move of the tank from the garage to a terrace in the back of my house on February 2006, there was a mayor construction in my house and the tank was on the floor with only two power heads for four months. This also affected some of the corals.

There were some ups and downs but with every situation I came with more determination to improve my tank and that is why it's still running today.

One of the best experiences during all these years was the nomination of tank of the month in Reefkeeping Magazine on November 2008.


1990 "“ 12


1991 "“ 04


1992 "“ 05


1993 - 10


1994 "“ 10


1996 "“ 03


1997 "“ 01


1998 "“ 02


1999 "“ 03


1999 "“ 10
 
2001 "“ 07


2004 "“ 11


2005 "“ 12


2007 "“ 01


2008 "“02


2008 "“ 10, TOTM November 2008


2009 "“ 02


2010 - 01


I hope you enjoy my story and the photos.
 
Now that's dedication! You have a beautiful reef, and I'm glad you maintained the passion for so long.

luisgo, is there a secret to your success? Any certain philosophy you adhere to that prevents you from tiring of the endless work you have put in over the years?

Thanks for sharing the pictures and the story! :)
 
WOW seeing that progression was really neat. Your photography has gotten better too. JK...:) Very nice that you have pictures of the tank for that long thank you for posting this.
 
Wow what a story! Thanks for sharing and even more for being part of the community. Without old timers, and I mean that in a reefkeeping sense (Dontcha know 50 is the new 30) we would have no one to learn from.
 
photography, lighting and coral selection were crazy different. thanks for posting thats cool to see.

what are you running for lights currently?

You must have seen all the nasties in tha time.
Any advice on things like hair algae, aiptasia, low PH?
common stuff that everyone has "heard" that X works?

Tank of the month is quite an achivement in itself Congrats on all your success!
 
Thanks for all the comments. I really enjoy to share my experiences in this forum.

iwishtofish –

There is a word that I will never use when I talk about reefkeeping and is “Work”. There is no work, is pure fun! When you do something you really like is not work. When I get home from “work” the fun starts! Success is related to planning, reading and patience. Be open to new ways of doing things is important but without forgetting what is working for others.

One thing that helps a lot is to keep track of things you do in your tank. I keep a log with an excel spreadsheet with water changes, new additives, fish and coral additions, etc. Photos of the tank will help to see the affects of the changes. That is why I have thousands of photos during this 20 years.

Ebruce01 –

My photography has improved and also the cameras. On 1990 I used an Olympus OM-1 with an excellent lens. The problem was with the film. The cost to buy and develop the film was a limiting factor. Today I have a Nikon D60 with an excellent lens and the only limit is my 4gb memory card. I will say that during last year I took around 5,000 photos of my tank! Practice is perfection.

Zoohoot – The yellow tang is not that old. I think it is in my tank from around 2004.

Jstdv8 – My lights now are 2 -175 watts Coralvue Reeflux metal halide, 12K and 2-URL VHO 160 watts, 1-superactinic and 1-actinic white. My canopy has over 15 years. I used to have the 5,500K MH bulbs when I started with MH. The ballasts are IceCap. They used to be Coralife.

Like you said I have seen everything. One of the things that I have learn is to watch my tank more than make tests. Another thing is that many of those products sold with many nice colors are not really necessary. Water changes are the key to success.

I will post some other photos when I get home of some of the equipment in those early years.
 
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