Stages of a reef setup---and many fish-onlies.

Sk8r

Staff member
RC Mod
1. cycle, well, yes. If you just drop in a few flakes of fishfood, you'll get there in 4 weeks with live rock, 8-12 weeks with mostly not-live rock (limestone.)
2. the break-in: you keep your bioload real light, ideally with little inverts whose real technical job is to poo. Naturally to do this, they have to eat. It's not as if they're going to eat all the algae in your tank---but if you have no algae, feed them. And qt and tank-transfer your fish.
3. the grunges. You will pass through a set of phases each uglier than the last: hair algae, brown crud, red slime, various films, and bubble. It's just normal. Check your nitrate, hammer it down below 10 if you can; run GFO to get rid of the phosphate (never mind the test: if it's green it's likely filled with it) and ---tune up your skimmer and just do your maintenance. Change out the GFO medium once monthly. If you can't get the nitrate down, use NoPoX, which is about the safest version of carbon dosing: it works in concert with your skimmer to export the extra biomass.
3. the honeymoon: this is when everything is shaping up and things are so happy you overstock...oops.
4. the breakup...this is where you realize you over-stressed your system and need to repeat step 2 until life thrives again.

Reefing is a matter of good balances. The temptation to try new things is there---but you have to pull yourself back from 'too much' and keep a decent balance of elements. For your convenience I carry some 'pretty good' readings in my sig line. Test and maintain those and qt your fishes and dip your corals and you should be able to survive the learning curve. Mostly be suspicious of shortcuts and be solid in your readings. Nothing good happens fast in beginning ice skating---or reefing.
 
Yep. Valonia. Bubble algae. Comes and goes.

It'll wear itself out and go away unless it's being fed by a surplus of something. Doesn't react to phosphate elimination the way hair does.---Basic phosphate-loving Hair is the easiest to get rid of. You hear all sorts of craziness about bubble, and the best advice is to ignore it unless it's widespread and getting worse. It usually goes away in a few weeks. Then somebody swears their 'method of removal' worked. ;)

Main thing is---whenever you meet a 'situation' with your tank, remember the honeymoon period and go back to first principles rather than buying some 'new-new-new!' notion or potion to fix it. Good water, proper rock, proper stocking levels rarely get into too much trouble.
 
I must be odd, but hair algae and bubble algae have never gotten me up in arms. In fact I am cultivating a HUGE "Big hair moment" of green hair algae in my leopard puffer tank (yes on purpose) because the amphipods love it, and they get HUGE living in it. I have other macro algaes, zoanthids, shrooms, and leathers in the tank, but the amphipods seem to do best in that massive clump growing behind the puffers favorite hiding spot. The amphipods get so big you start to think you need to get out the cocktail sauce. And the puffers love being able to play "mighty hunter" when the amphipods dare wander from the hairy green forest.
 
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