Also remember the entire ocean and all the river tributaries that provide new water to the ocean are completely lined with "dirt". Salt contains impurities from the mining process -- miniscule traces of belt dressings, grease lubricants, residue from ammonium nitrate explosives, personal contributions from guys who decided not to make the walk to the Here's Johnny -- and mostly natural impurities like the rock the salt is embedded with, the last being pretty inert safe stuff though, not too much different from "dirt".<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8757925#post8757925 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ROR
Remember, you'll be putting any left over dirt and anything in it into your tank. Do you really want to do that? You can't beat salt for aerating your rock- and its almost as cheap as dirt.
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8774903#post8774903 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Bubbled-tip
I just read all 51 pages!
I have only 1 question:rollface:
Is it OK after the concrete cure and salt/alk cure (freshwater) can I use the ocean in Maine to seed or is the cooler water bacteria/live rock life not suitable to a tropical reef? I would think the bacteria would be OK but criiters would not.
Recommendations?
Anyone tried it?
I agree too. Pete Mohan, now of the Akron Zoo, once built a marine system for critters from under the Antarctic ice. Calculating the size of biofilter needed to handle this tank resulted in an impossibly large size if the filter were at the same temperature as the tank, so the water went through a heat exchanger to get to the warm filter, getting warmed up as it went, then after filtration, back through the heat exchanger to chill, then through the chiller to control the exact temperature, an energy-wise system. The bacteria could survive on both sides of the temperature cline, but the marine animals could only survive on the chilled side. The display tanks were also inside a modified grocery store frozen food cabinet since a chiller could not do this task alone and the insulation in the cabinet made it more energy saving.<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8774903#post8774903 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Bubbled-tip
I just read all 51 pages!
I have only 1 question:rollface:
Is it OK after the concrete cure and salt/alk cure (freshwater) can I use the ocean in Maine to seed or is the cooler water bacteria/live rock life not suitable to a tropical reef? I would think the bacteria would be OK but criiters would not.
Recommendations?
Anyone tried it?
My wife works at Starbucks. They already save their grounds and make them freely available - apparently people use them in their gardens. And they don't come anywhere close to giving it all away. I'm sure you could acquire more than you could ever use just by asking for it.<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8844843#post8844843 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by tankslave
I dont know about asking Starbucks for its leftover grounds.