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Tristan wrote:
Same for that wet bagged live sand that is sold. HOw much good do you really think that stuff serves. I see bags of it that are expired, or laying on a stores display shelf in direct sunlight and hot/warm, it sets for days on end in a hot truck while being transported, or in a cold truck during winter.......Best bet on that sand is buy cheaper dry pack sand and get a cup of live sand from someones established tank or add live rock and let it seed the sand with bacteria. Thats all the bagged sand is capable of having anyhow, and that can come from good live rock anyhow.... I used dry sand as the substrate....the tank is now 4 months old and the substrate is alive and crawling with all sorts of life and has been for the majority of time that it has been in the tank since the LR was added - so my conclusion was that dead sand will become live sand quite quickly and at a fraction of cost to whatever might be sold as "live sand". I even took this live/dead thing a bit further and used "dead" rock as well as the live stuff when setting up the tank....the "dead" rock is now very much alive and again cost a fraction of the price of the live stuff - I guess the key was to find the balance in quantity between the live and dead (I guess I did 2/3 LR and 1/3 dead) and also to be very slow/patient about the additions of anything into the tank....of course, when it comes to buying the LR it also has to be remembered, well certainly for the stuff I buy, the coral colonies/frags are actually sited on Live Rock - which again just adds more and more into the equation and balance of the tank Gill On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 18:40:45 GMT, "TheRock" wrote: I meant "purchasing cured rock"...you are correct. And to further clarify...internet cured rock. Especially when they ship it in wet newspapers. "George Patterson" wrote in message news:9Ntqh.386$AG6.142@trnddc06... TheRock wrote: Somebody correct me if I am wrong but i believe there is no such thing as cured rock. Live rock that has been marinated in water (as you put it) until nothing dies anymore is said to be "cured live rock." The curing process typically involves low light levels, lots of circulation, and large water changes. George Patterson Forgive your enemies. But always remember who they are. ------- I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know! |
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