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#1
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I've had freshwater aquarium for years with no problems. I'm ready to
switch to salt water. I purchased the necessary equipment and supplies. Ocean salt in bags, Wet/Dry filter, skimmer, sand (store bought)hydrometer, hi ph test kits and powerheads. I will be using a 55 gallon tank. I live close to the ocean. Is there any problems if I go ahead and get ocean water VS purchasing sea salt and do my mix. How about water changes. Can I use ocean water? How about sand and rocks from the ocean? Thanks Rudy |
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rudedog wrote:
I live close to the ocean. Is there any problems if I go ahead and get ocean water VS purchasing sea salt and do my mix. How about water changes. Can I use ocean water? How about sand and rocks from the ocean? Yes, you can use stuff straight from the sea. The main problem you will have is the possibility of pollution if you take your water from close to shore. Don't introduce too much of the sand and rocks at any one time. They may be harboring various little critters. If these then die in the tank, the water quality may become so poor that your other livestock dies. This is why people "season" live rock and sand. George Patterson Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks. |
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Hmmmm. season? I guess I better start going to the archives on how to
season.... thanks Rudy |
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rudedog wrote:
I've had freshwater aquarium for years with no problems. I'm ready to switch to salt water. I purchased the necessary equipment and supplies. Ocean salt in bags, Wet/Dry filter, skimmer, sand (store bought)hydrometer, hi ph test kits and powerheads. I will be using a 55 gallon tank. I live close to the ocean. Is there any problems if I go ahead and get ocean water VS purchasing sea salt and do my mix. How about water changes. Can I use ocean water? How about sand and rocks from the ocean? Thanks Rudy Rudy, Natural ocean water is the best for your tank, as long as the water is not poluted or diluted from near shore areas. It is best if you can go out a mile or so from shore to collect it. as for the sand and rock, really depends on where you are at. If you are in the tropics, you should be fine, but from more temperate areas it is not really a good idea because the main reason you want live sand and rock is for the life on/in them. And if the life you have is temperate life, it might not survive at tropical tempuratures so you will end up with dead sand and rock anyway. Also on your supplies you talk about a wet dry, what are you planing on putting in your tank? If you are planning on a reef tank, I would suggest you skip the wet dry completely. Kim |
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Kim,
I go tuna fishing all the time. I go about 10-40 miles out depending on the boat I use. I guess I'll be collecting sea water every time I go out. I have several 5 gallon buckets. I'm only doing FOWLR. Hmmmm, I just started cycling my tank. Can you tell me if I used fresh ocean water for the entire 55 gallons, would I have to cycle my tank??? Also how long will the water be good for since I can get about 5 to 6 buckets only. That's about 3 water changes only. I guess I better do some serious tuna fishing from now on. LOL. Thanks for the input. Rudy |
#6
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"rudedog" wrote in message oups.com...
Also how long will the water be good for since I can get about 5 to 6 buckets only. That's about 3 water changes only. Unfiltered water straight from the sea will have a lot of live plankton swimming in it, so if you restrict oxygen all these critters die polluting heavily water. When you bring water for storage filter it through several plankton collectors and put live plankton into the fish tank for fish to eat it. Do not leave it in the storage container to rot. Store only filtered water - as a last stage of filtering you can use fine coffee paper filters to remove almost everything but unicellular algae. Even these algal cells will die over time so your water will decay. But without any filtering it would be very smelly next day already. Give it a try. |
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rudedog wrote:
Can you tell me if I used fresh ocean water for the entire 55 gallons, would I have to cycle my tank??? Yes. The water doesn't contain much in the way of nitrifying bacteria -- they generally live in the substrate, live rock, or in something like a wet/dry filter. George Patterson Give a person a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a person to use the Internet and he won't bother you for weeks. |
#8
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rudedog wrote:
Kim, I go tuna fishing all the time. I go about 10-40 miles out depending on the boat I use. I guess I'll be collecting sea water every time I go out. I have several 5 gallon buckets. I'm only doing FOWLR. Hmmmm, I just started cycling my tank. Can you tell me if I used fresh ocean water for the entire 55 gallons, would I have to cycle my tank??? Also how long will the water be good for since I can get about 5 to 6 buckets only. That's about 3 water changes only. I guess I better do some serious tuna fishing from now on. LOL. Thanks for the input. Rudy You will still have to cycle the tank, since you need the bacteria to grow on your rock. One bad thing about using ocean water is if you do not use it quickly there is a lot of plankton in it, which can die and cause problems. If you can't use the water within 24 hours our so, you will want to put it in a dark room with no circulation for a week or to, and then filter out the stuff on the bottom of your buckets, or use a really fine filter to run the water through to filter out all of the plankton. Kim |
#9
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![]() "rudedog" wrote in message oups.com... Hmmmm. season? I guess I better start going to the archives on how to season.... Commonly refered to as "curing" as well. http://www.drsfostersmith.com/pic/ar...id=388&aid=851 billy |
#10
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