BummersReef
New member
Forgive me if I ask stupid questions. I have been reading forum posts and trying to condense it all in my brain. And LFS is far away so hard to ask questions as I think of them!
We have a 120 gallon acrylic tank with a gorgeous stand and canopy that we are getting ready to "start." I will have sump, skimmer and RO thingie questions but what I am currently trying to sort out is the ROCK issue. Here is what I want:
- to use as little non-coral-reef-friendly rock as possible (I have looked around and think the BRS reef saver rock looks pretty good as far as that goes ..??...)
- to save money
- to do the aquascaping (design) only once right at the beginning because I have an acrylic tank and don't want to be bumping and moving rock in there and scratching it all up
so this is my hoped-for plan/idea:
- get about 80 (100? more?) pounds of the reef saver rock, some epoxy/glue and putty and use that rock for the entire reef/rock scape. Set it, glue it, secure it exactly as I want it to be in 10 years
- maybe get a few pieces of live rock from LFS and put it in the sump or just lay it in the tank (to be removed when all the cycling etc is done)
- get a bottle of ... something (I can't remember brand names) that is supposed to start your cycle going, that has the bacteria you need to kick the whole thing into gear
- get my sand and water from the LFS (I think we will want a RO system but don't need to get that right away ... too much plumbing involved for now)
- lay down the sand and then pour in the water
- add heater, water flow blower thing and let it go for a long time!! (yes, weeks, a month or two?) get the sump running as part of this too ...
- test regular until it cycles all through
(oh I hope this isn't a really stupid idea)
Can I do that? I know it will take a LONG time for the rock to actually begin to look like live rock and have color and all that. But I don't really mind waiting. (my kids may not like that but oh well) As I am waiting, I can save and plan for some really good LED lighting and get a good protein skimmer and sort out the RO issue
Do I have to mess with curing the dry rock? Can't I just let the curing and cycling follow each other?
sorry if this is just plain stupid ...
Carla
We have a 120 gallon acrylic tank with a gorgeous stand and canopy that we are getting ready to "start." I will have sump, skimmer and RO thingie questions but what I am currently trying to sort out is the ROCK issue. Here is what I want:
- to use as little non-coral-reef-friendly rock as possible (I have looked around and think the BRS reef saver rock looks pretty good as far as that goes ..??...)
- to save money
- to do the aquascaping (design) only once right at the beginning because I have an acrylic tank and don't want to be bumping and moving rock in there and scratching it all up
so this is my hoped-for plan/idea:
- get about 80 (100? more?) pounds of the reef saver rock, some epoxy/glue and putty and use that rock for the entire reef/rock scape. Set it, glue it, secure it exactly as I want it to be in 10 years
- maybe get a few pieces of live rock from LFS and put it in the sump or just lay it in the tank (to be removed when all the cycling etc is done)
- get a bottle of ... something (I can't remember brand names) that is supposed to start your cycle going, that has the bacteria you need to kick the whole thing into gear
- get my sand and water from the LFS (I think we will want a RO system but don't need to get that right away ... too much plumbing involved for now)
- lay down the sand and then pour in the water
- add heater, water flow blower thing and let it go for a long time!! (yes, weeks, a month or two?) get the sump running as part of this too ...
- test regular until it cycles all through
(oh I hope this isn't a really stupid idea)
Can I do that? I know it will take a LONG time for the rock to actually begin to look like live rock and have color and all that. But I don't really mind waiting. (my kids may not like that but oh well) As I am waiting, I can save and plan for some really good LED lighting and get a good protein skimmer and sort out the RO issue
Do I have to mess with curing the dry rock? Can't I just let the curing and cycling follow each other?
sorry if this is just plain stupid ...
Carla