Actually
Rick, that was something we had talked about not too long ago (3 months maybe?) - air kuring. Rustylugnutz brought it up the other day too.
Air kuring allows the CO2 in the air (and rain if left outside) to chemically alter the C-S-H of hydrated cement into Calcium Carbonate. Calcium Carbonate has a pH of around 7.
This was were the email I posted from the cement.org guy was going - that if we could use a CO2 chamber, it would quickly accomplish this and have low pH rock. Unfortunately no one has volunteered to help me with my DIY CO2 Chamber, so I am researching other ways of using CO2. I'm wondering if using something like seltzer water to make the mud would do anything at all - something called a "supercritical fluid" (basically both a liquid and a gas (at the same time?) form of CO2 is used to assist in producing homogeneous carbonation - which would be just awesome for us.
But really, really impractical.
So thoughts turn to what we can use at home and carbonated water comes to mind. Not going to produce near the same results, but might help somewhat toward the goal.
I'm also wondering what repeated wetting and drying cycles might do towards this end...
Did you do any water changes on this rock,
Rick? A kure other than just sitting outside?
Anyway, stir that test container good, but if it still reads 7, and your rock has been in for a week or so? I'd say you are good to go.
A few people have been trying the air kure (I have a few more pieces too), and seems that air kuring might be almost as effective as water kuring.
More tests should be done - it would be nice for the traditional methods if you could get as much kuring by just leaving it alone as you would by wasting effort and water. Though you'd still probably need to flush some crud out, but a few water changes are better then a lot of water changes...
Unless you have access to a lab, and people who know how to use all the stuff in it, we are pretty much limited to the same things we test our tank for. Might want to test for Phosphates or Silicates, if you have them handy, or if your LFS will do the tests for you (some will, some may charge) - those might be interesting to see, but it is pretty much that or the "chuck it in and see if crap lives or dies" test...
