We're approaching a crosstown move.
The tank: 52 g corner bow, lot of live rock, 4" sandbed.
The livestock: LPS, SPS, fishes, sponges, clam.
The gear: skimmer, mh lights, sea swirl, pumps, topoff, etc.
So here's the plan as I have it: please critique and check me on this.
I'm calling the piano movers to move the piano and the tank: 1/2 inch glass, weighs a ton, and we're on the third floor.
I start that morning and drain the tank, putting rock into buckets containing tank water so the sponge won't die.
Fish: into ziplocks with tank water. LFS will hold them for me for a few days. Corals into buckets with tank water. NOW---can I install the corals into the tank that evening with partial new water? Or do I send them to the lfs?
Sand: rinse sand in remnant of water, gather up in net and put in watery bucket.
Take fish [and corals?] to lfs.
Take buckets of rock and sand and gear and stand to new digs. Set up tank, with partial old water, partial new. Start everything up.
Somewhere in here I'm being pressured to paint the stand with waterproofing, which I think is iffy. I don't see how I'm going to do this and get it running expeditiously.
The tank is running with about 50% new water. Over 50 lbs of live ancient rock, well-corallined, full of holes. 4 inches of old sand, maybe a little new added.
How long do you think its going to take before I can reintroduce corals? Any bets I could actually put corals in on the same day, based on the fact I had a piece of bubble coral survive cycling when I set the tank up in the first place---raw water at 40 degrees temp, and it lived. So did the snails and other inverts, sponges, etc. It wasn't my choice, then. It is now---I'm wondering how much risk I'd be running, or whether it's better at the lfs.
And how long before fishes go in? I know, I know, nobody on earth can predict, but I'm very willing to hear bets on this, too. Just wondering whether I'm too optimistic in my own estimates.
The tank: 52 g corner bow, lot of live rock, 4" sandbed.
The livestock: LPS, SPS, fishes, sponges, clam.
The gear: skimmer, mh lights, sea swirl, pumps, topoff, etc.
So here's the plan as I have it: please critique and check me on this.
I'm calling the piano movers to move the piano and the tank: 1/2 inch glass, weighs a ton, and we're on the third floor.
I start that morning and drain the tank, putting rock into buckets containing tank water so the sponge won't die.
Fish: into ziplocks with tank water. LFS will hold them for me for a few days. Corals into buckets with tank water. NOW---can I install the corals into the tank that evening with partial new water? Or do I send them to the lfs?
Sand: rinse sand in remnant of water, gather up in net and put in watery bucket.
Take fish [and corals?] to lfs.
Take buckets of rock and sand and gear and stand to new digs. Set up tank, with partial old water, partial new. Start everything up.
Somewhere in here I'm being pressured to paint the stand with waterproofing, which I think is iffy. I don't see how I'm going to do this and get it running expeditiously.
The tank is running with about 50% new water. Over 50 lbs of live ancient rock, well-corallined, full of holes. 4 inches of old sand, maybe a little new added.
How long do you think its going to take before I can reintroduce corals? Any bets I could actually put corals in on the same day, based on the fact I had a piece of bubble coral survive cycling when I set the tank up in the first place---raw water at 40 degrees temp, and it lived. So did the snails and other inverts, sponges, etc. It wasn't my choice, then. It is now---I'm wondering how much risk I'd be running, or whether it's better at the lfs.
And how long before fishes go in? I know, I know, nobody on earth can predict, but I'm very willing to hear bets on this, too. Just wondering whether I'm too optimistic in my own estimates.