Questionable logic?
Questionable logic?
"As that is what folks have as an idea of what "sand" looks like. The truth is "sand" in the Gulf is bits of everything that is out there....shells, corals, ect. ect . ect. Most of the sand issue is perception, not reality. Like DSB, works ok, but is not great in the long run. In the Gulf there is no DSB, there is about 1.25-3inch layer of live sand, under that is a stinky dead putrid layer of gook, trust me I know as if we go a little too deep collecting sand, the product is worthless and very stinky. Thus I came to realize that the top 1-2 inches is what mother nature uses, and what we use.
TBS
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Am I the only one that finds this logic and reasoning a little questionable? Given the complexity and scale of the worlds oceans, and all the biological and chemical reactions going I think it might be a little simplistic to assume because the 'The spots where we do our diggin is only 2 inches deep so thats how the ocean works, yeehaw buy our stuff'. I seriously doubt the sandbed accounts for all the nutrient export. I'm pretty sure the chemistry invloved is far more complex. Given the small closed system of a reef tank, and the fact that a reef tank is 3 feet deep at the maximum, and the sandbed where you are drawing the sand from is under ten times the amount of water, receiving different light, currents and completely different systems of energy this logic seems overly simplistic and sophmoric. The further proof that 'everyone that buys the package says it works; (some how I doubt the ten people who have just started their tanks, who post zealously represent EVERYONE who bought THE PACKAGE) Myself and everyone I know who started their reef tanks was this excited when they originaly started their tank. This simplistic reasoning seems flawed and I don't think I would drop a bunch of money on sand based on this logic.
The only reason I post is over two years ago I spent a bunch of money on TBS rock. And all these posts and excitement remind me exactly of how I felt when I started my tank with the rock. Only I didn't realize two things. 1. its so dense compared to other rocks you have to by so much to give the appearance of the other cured rocks it comes out being more expensive. And 2. the whole concept of 'curing' rock which TBS has so zealously disregarded served a very real purpose. The purpose of live rock is coraline alga and its ability to break down amonia etc. and thus work as an effective filter. The theory is to buy live rock for the coraline alga which will spread and filter your tank. The idea was that when you cure it you get ride of everything else (yes even the pretty little sponges) and the mantis shrimp. The reason people did this is as you become more advanced in your reefing its really nice to know exactly whats in there (as mantis shrimp can really screw things up) in addition to all the other stuff. If you are new to reef aquariums, I'm sorry but you arent going to be able to keep sponges. I know many advanced reef keepers who have very limited success in this. I only write this because this 'fervor' towards TBS I only understand because I went through it when I started my first tank and bought all their rock. I wish now that I had a better understanding of live rock, its purpose and realistically the begining or intermediate reefers ability to keep 75% of the stuff on the rock. Dieing clams release A LOT of amonia. Dieing sponges turn your water bright orange. As all of that really cool life (that you dont see in anyone else tank but yours! even the guys with years experience) will slowly receed and slowly release all the nutrients and chemicals bound up within their cells. I had a gorgeous looking see squirt thing on one of my rocks, thank god the owner of the LFS explained to me that when they die they release poison, I got him out right as he was dieing.
I think most experienced reefers will agree that with a new tank, with new rock you will atleast encounter one significant alga bloom. A lot of stuff may not survive that bloom, and the only thing worse than a big bloom is a big bloom followed by significant die off.
My only desire is to offer my input from my experience with my tank. When I first started researching TBS it was really exciting, and it contradicted a lot of what the aquarium books I read had said. Not cure rock! well if you keep it in water it doesnt need to be cured! 1 inch sand bed! theres gunk below the gulf! TBS rock was instant gratification, and until troubles started all my reefer friends were envious of all the life and thought they were suckers for buying cured rock.
Anyways think hard about your decision, its a lot of money, and fads come and go. I'll be honest, I'm setting up my parents tank and since I live in the Tampa area I'll probably by TBS. But I'm going to tear all that pretty life off, and get all the creatures off it (I can seed copiopodes from my sand for them) and cure it in some manner, so its just rock and coraline alga. Thats the good thing abot the rock, tons of coraline alga and thats the whole idea of live rock. I just notice everyone is so excited about all the other life, generally not realizing that all that life will end up being a huge headache, and frustrate the ultimate goal of keeping and mainting specific selected species of coral.
The entire time I had my tank I ran 440 watts of VHO on a 90 gallon. Maintained calcium at 400, ph at 8.3 and alk at around 9. I dosed and tested, Magnesium, Strontium, Calcium, Bromide and Trace elemtns I never used anything but RO, and still had die off. If you are thinking of being any less diligent Think hard about the likelyhood of any of the life surviving. I have enclosed a picture of my tank after I got all the TBS rock, and my tank now. Along the way I added more TBS rock, and theres still just coraline alga (mind you lots because of my dosing) now.
I hope someone finds my input helpful. I'm not saying don't buy their rock, its good stuff. Just have very real expectations about maintaining the life that comes on the rock, and understand the consequences in terms of chemistry when the various life begins to receed. Nothing comes without hard work on a reef tank.
Hope this post saves some people some of the 100 of hours I spent on my tank.
As far as live sand, thats a lot of money to have a tank cycle quick or whatever their reasoning for live sand is. Heres a secret, before someone started selling sand, when you put a bunch of live rock in a tank, pretty soon your boring old sand, became LIVE SAND. Crazy huh? Another crazy little trick, get a bunch of the boring old regular sand, get maybe a gallon of live sand, put it in, and all those little organisms breed and spread pretty quick and all of a sudden you got a bunch of live sand. And the money you saved on paying to ship 40 lbs of sand, you can spend on something that will really matter, like lights.
I don't mean to be flip, I just see a lot of fervor and excitement, that I admitt consumed me, and I spent a bunch of money on, when if I had taken the time to research, or ask those experienced. Hope this maybe helped someone.
Heres the tank right after I got the rock
Here is my tank now, only the coraline alga remains.
A