Trajedy Struck this last week after a mistake during a new project led to the crash of my entire reef. The tank ended up having the entire contents of a hotwater heater dumped into it, followed by hundreds of gallons of icy cold tap water until I woke up to discover the incident. My basement was filled with water and I was jolted awake to realize it wasn't a nightmare when I received a painful shock upon stepping into the water from a circuit that did not blow... Long story short, I saved the majority of my fish, but every coral has been lost. (zoanthids pending). Results of this catastrophe are posted below.
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the devestation
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the tank now
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the tank now
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the first few hours, the corals seemed as if they could make it, but to no avail.
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colors faded, but did not survive
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gallons of liquid coral being skimmed each hour
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years of work, fit into a bucket
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first to die
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a tank crash is not for the faint of heart, my girlfriend shed a tear for her favorite fish
-unlike others, I will not hide the ugly side to a mistake
After I calmed down, I decided to call reefkeeping friends to come help. They helped me bring the salinity and temperature back to normal within 4 hours. All of the fish that were laying on their sides began showing life again. The coral on the other hand, was exposed to hypo salinity and 50F water for far, far too long.
Current state of affairs:
-total SPS loss, all green star polyps are gone, all inverts, anemones, foxface rabit fish and my coveted achilles tang are all dead. My ammonia was 4ppm as of last night. (down from 8ppm the day prior). I'm experiencing a mini-cycle and I'm not sure what will happen. The only thing I can do is sit and watch. Once the cycle is complete, I will begin to perform 25% water changes as fast as I can across a month until I bring the water to 80% purity.
-This of course, had to happen right before our yearly frag swap in Michigan. I had a large tank of frags ready to sell. Instead, I went to the swap and sat at my empty table.
What hurt the most:
-losing 2 years of solid growth
-losing the achilles tang, it took 6 months to find him, and he was our favorite fish, so active
-losing approximately $1000 out of pocket for first time frag purchases, fish, inverts and salt to refill.
The Silver Lining:
-Many members from Michigan reefers have offered to help re-stock my tank with SPS and I have a member baby-sitting frags I picked up from the swap.
-I can now re-organize my tank so I will not have such a maintenance nightmare with all the corals touching eachother.
-I can enjoy the growing stages again
The Future:
-After much debate, I decided I should indeed try again, as I did not kill the coral from negligence, but only an accident. I love the hobby too much and have spent too much money to throw in the towel yet. (not to mention I don't have kids yet, so I should enjoy this while I still have time) I plan to restock using only millepora and montipora caps as they do very well in my tank and provide the most color from a distance compared to other corals. I will also try to grow a GSP wall again over time. I'm going to keep corals atleast 10-12" apart so they have plenty of room to grow out. I will not add any troublesome creatures like anemones, LPS or mushrooms that will get in the way of my SPS growth.
*The project that I screwed up on in question, was the installation of a natural gas operated heating element system for the tank. I used a glued fitting on PEX flexible tubing instead of a compression fitting. I did not know that was wrong until it was too late. I will post this natural gas heater in a seperate thread and also here. It is very strong and much cheaper then my expensive electric heaters.