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#1
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Hello!
I've kept an aquarium for years. I started with a ten gallon filled with guppies. Blah, Blah, Blah.... I now have a 70 gallon with Irridescents and believe it or not, goldfish. I had 2 "worms" that decided to commit suicide... no matter how tightly I sealed the top, they managed to find a way out... At any rate, I'd like to know how to convert this tank (in plain english please ie: step 1: step2: step3: ) I would like to wind up with one that is as self sustaining as possible. I know thats a fantasy, but with as minimal amount of maintenance as is possible. The sw aquariums that I have seen in the past are absolutely beautiful with wonderful fish and "rock" colors that just can not be duplicated in a fw aquarium. The specifics: The aquarium is in my living room. It can be placed 2ft to the E side of a South facing window, or 12ft to the N of the same south facing window. The window has light filtering blinds, but are not black out blinds. In either spot, indirect sun is almost all day, with first location getting the minimal amount from the side rather than the front. The aquarium has a solid cover (two lamps versus one long that I seldom ever turn on) with "holes" for filteration system in back (currently using two whisper 60's) I use a submergible heater, that for yr's now has been very accurate) About once a month, I use a python to remove about 1/2 the water and replace. Both filters (charcoal) are changed monthly. I use about 2 T's aquarium salt every couple months with water change and StartRight with every water change. Thanks for any help! |
#2
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Get this book and read it.
Then if you do not want it, sell it on Half.com http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...books&n=507846 IMHO, I think it is the best book for newbies to marine/reef aquariums...... -- Stephen -------------------------------------------------- In-Dash MP3 http://www.highwaymp3.com/ -------------------------------------------------- "Kathy Moon" wrote in message om... Hello! I've kept an aquarium for years. I started with a ten gallon filled with guppies. Blah, Blah, Blah.... I now have a 70 gallon with Irridescents and believe it or not, goldfish. I had 2 "worms" that decided to commit suicide... no matter how tightly I sealed the top, they managed to find a way out... At any rate, I'd like to know how to convert this tank (in plain english please ie: step 1: step2: step3: ) I would like to wind up with one that is as self sustaining as possible. I know thats a fantasy, but with as minimal amount of maintenance as is possible. The sw aquariums that I have seen in the past are absolutely beautiful with wonderful fish and "rock" colors that just can not be duplicated in a fw aquarium. The specifics: The aquarium is in my living room. It can be placed 2ft to the E side of a South facing window, or 12ft to the N of the same south facing window. The window has light filtering blinds, but are not black out blinds. In either spot, indirect sun is almost all day, with first location getting the minimal amount from the side rather than the front. The aquarium has a solid cover (two lamps versus one long that I seldom ever turn on) with "holes" for filteration system in back (currently using two whisper 60's) I use a submergible heater, that for yr's now has been very accurate) About once a month, I use a python to remove about 1/2 the water and replace. Both filters (charcoal) are changed monthly. I use about 2 T's aquarium salt every couple months with water change and StartRight with every water change. Thanks for any help! |
#3
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http://www.melevsreef.com/overview.htm
Read that before you buy a book.. lots of books aren't all that great but I do not know anything about the one mentioned in the other response. I have just found that getting advice here.. well actually on the reefs group where I hang out, but this one would work too.. is better than books. There is no such thing as a self sustaining reef or marine tank.. I have kept freshwater for more than 30 years, got into marine a year ago. Throw almost everything you know out the window except cycling processes.. If you want all the *colorful rock* etc, if you mean more than just live rock, which is very colorful if it's got corraline in the pinks reds and purples, sometimes blue-ish.. it's very pretty.. but you are probably thinking of reef tanks you have seen with all the gorgeous corals in every color you can imagine. A new lighting system would be a must for that and on a 70 gallon tank, you're looking at well over $500 for something adequate to support most corals. Sun coming in through a window will do nothing but promote algae growth. You would not want to change out that much water (half) at one time in a sal****er tank, even just once a month. It's really not needed at all unless you need to bring a problem under control, such as ammonia. You could use your whisper filters if you take out the pads and just use the whisper for water circulation.. I use them but keep the pads out except about once every couple weeks I stick them back in, stir up the substrate a bit (crushed coral..) and let it filter out, then take the pads back out. It is a little more complicated than just a 1 2 3 step kind of thing! You first need to decide what you want to do.. if you just want fish and live rock (live rock is a great filter..) or if you want a reef tank or a combination, in which case you need to be sure your critters are reef safe and won't snack on a coral in the tank that you just spent $50 on.. Anyway.. go read that link first.. it's a great overview written by someone on the reef newsgroup after Finding Nemo came out... Teeb "Kathy Moon" wrote in message om... Hello! I've kept an aquarium for years. I started with a ten gallon filled with guppies. Blah, Blah, Blah.... I now have a 70 gallon with Irridescents and believe it or not, goldfish. I had 2 "worms" that decided to commit suicide... no matter how tightly I sealed the top, they managed to find a way out... At any rate, I'd like to know how to convert this tank (in plain english please ie: step 1: step2: step3: ) I would like to wind up with one that is as self sustaining as possible. I know thats a fantasy, but with as minimal amount of maintenance as is possible. The sw aquariums that I have seen in the past are absolutely beautiful with wonderful fish and "rock" colors that just can not be duplicated in a fw aquarium. The specifics: The aquarium is in my living room. It can be placed 2ft to the E side of a South facing window, or 12ft to the N of the same south facing window. The window has light filtering blinds, but are not black out blinds. In either spot, indirect sun is almost all day, with first location getting the minimal amount from the side rather than the front. The aquarium has a solid cover (two lamps versus one long that I seldom ever turn on) with "holes" for filteration system in back (currently using two whisper 60's) I use a submergible heater, that for yr's now has been very accurate) About once a month, I use a python to remove about 1/2 the water and replace. Both filters (charcoal) are changed monthly. I use about 2 T's aquarium salt every couple months with water change and StartRight with every water change. Thanks for any help! |
#4
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I have a 70 gal tank, a fluval (505, I think --- I'm out of town now so I'll
have to look it up later if it matters), a powerhead, and heater. Plus I have an automatic feeder that plugs into an air pump to keep the flakes dry. The light is on a timer. The feeder is only really for when I travel, but I gotten used to relying on it, and the fish know what that sound means twice a day! I currently have just 2 fish, a blenny and a clown + 2 hermit crabs. I'll be getting another clown soon. I make sure there is pleny of rock and broken shells for the blenny to hide in ( he sleeps between the heater and the glass! ) I'll probably get another 1-3 more fish sometime. I had a 2nd clown, but he caught some kind of disease and treatment did no good. (A word of advice, go ahead and get a small 2nd tank for a hospital tank!) I probably only change the water about every 6 weeks. I use Amquel to treat the tap water. I use carbon in a bag in one fluval basket, some ammonia soaking resin in another basket, and keep the 3rd basket for bio-filtering. I use Coral Life salt in a 50lb bucket. Anyway, it is about as "self-sufficient" as you can get, I suppose. I keep a good watch on the ammonia and the salt level (with a Deep Six tester). I've had very few problems --- the worst being when the first Fluval burned up on me. I sent them the powerhead and they replaced it with no questions asked. I made do with a small bio-wheel until I got the new Fluval. The hermets take care of a lot of the janitorial duties. Every now and then I provide them with bigger shells as they grow. I initially bought a testing kit that tests just about everything you test for. But about the only thing I still test frequently is for ammonia, and I never have any problem with it. I top off the water to bring the salt level down to normal now and then. When I do change the water, I move all fish + crabs into a bucket so I don't damage or stress them out. And I make sure to suck up the detrius when I change the water, by stirring up the sand vigorously while I siphon the water out. I've been doing this for over 4 years now, and the tank has worked out just fine. I've had the clown fish for the entire time. Worthy of notice is that I don't have any live coral in the tank, and the hermits are about as hardy as any tank critter gets ! A medium sized resin fake barnacle provides some color and a comfortable hiding place for the blenny. This is just my experience. If you add any other invertibrates like coral or anything else, I'm sure maintenance and attention to water quality would be more of an issue. But with just a few fish, lots of horizontal swimming room, and a couple of hermit crabs, I have had very little trouble. The only thing I really have to worry about is the power going out for more than a day --- but you can get pumps that run on battery when AC goes off or even a UPS (Uninterruptible Power Supply) to take care of that. Hope that helps! P.S. I agree on reading the links mentioned in this thread! |
#5
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I am sorry because its late and I am tired but
I top off the water to bring the salt level down to normal now and then. When I do change the water, I move all fish + crabs into a bucket so I don't damage or stress them out. And I make sure to suck up the detrius when I change the water, by stirring up the sand vigorously while I siphon the water out. did you just say what it sounds like you just said ??? if your moving your fish into a bucket every time you do waterchanges its SOOOO much more stressful on them than just being in the tank. also you would be good to test for nitrates, instead of ammonia, if your tank is 4years old amminia is less significant. -- -- richard reynolds |
#6
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