Sorry for the long post, but experience reef keepers will probably find many things in common with this ..
I have had a fish tank for as long as I remember. We lived in California, and I had a 70 gallon bow-front tank - originally tropical. It became very boring and so I invested some money to convert it to Reef.
For about 3 years I maintained it as a reef. Initially I lost a lot of coral and fish - probably thousands of dollars if I'm realistic. About 3 years ago, I sold it on Ebay because we were preparing to move to the East Coast (Boston).
Everytime my husband asks me what I'd like for my birthday, Christmas, 'as a treat', I've said ... A fish tank. I think this Christmas my dream came true!!
So this Christmas, I have a gift certificate for Tropic Isle in Framingham. It's not enough to get me the huge tank I desire, but it's at least 1/3 of the way there. By the end of this week (owing to a business situation) I will know whether I am relegated to a 30 gallon reef ... or upgraded to a 100 gallon reef.
My experience with converting a non-drilled tank has made me rather opinionated. I used to have a refugium hanging on the back - which dripped salt down the wall behind. Also a protein-skimmer. Then a UV thing (can't remember what it was called) because I didn't have a sump and couldn't upgrade to the proper filtration because it was not a drilled tank. I used an external cylinder pump which I rarely cleaned and did water changes only about once every 2 months because I had to drop the water level by 8 inches and it damaged almost every coral at the top. However, I did have many successes - the Xenia did well and I had lots of baby sand-sifter star fish. I loved my tank, but recognized the down-sides of doing it this way.
So, here I am preparing to go straight into reef-dom!
This is what I want to do .. I'd appreciate a few opinions and suggestions if anyone is willing!!
I want to get a flat front tank this time - it's too hard to clean the bow fronted ones with a magnetic cleaner!!. I want to start in at 75 gallons min. External sump - filled with live rock. Not doing the UV thing. Not doing the refugium thing. Not doing the protein skimmer thing unless I need to. I will load it with about 100 lbs live rock. Plenty of live sand. Heaters will be in the sump. If all works out OK will get the metal halide lights so that I can have the corals requiring the best lighting.
I don't want to cycle the tank with the dansels .. they're too hard to remove when cycling is complete and they destroy any other kind of fish (based on my experience). What do you recommend? I would have clowns .. but don't want the cheap cycling fish again.
Last time having loads of tank cleaning crews worked well. I have lots of crabs, sifter starfish, yukky things I can't even touch .. including those brittle stars (which freek me our because they look like spiders from your worse nightmare!!). However, these clean-up guys made the tank stable and I think I've load it up with these guys again - opinions, please?
The tank I have in mind has an overflow system.
I think you probably get the picture. I have an opportunity to do it properly and with my past experience of 3 years in the reef game I am really ready.
Is there anyone from New England out there who can recommend places to get coral/fish? I am obviously getting the tank and supplies/cycling fish from Tropic Isle, but since I've also been in New England for only (almost!) 2 years I'm not really sure of the alternative stores and places to buy supplies.
I would really appreciate ANY comments, feedback, suggestions, advice. What would you do if you could have your set-up chance again???
Mrs Fish
Lexington, MA
Formerly of San Jose, CA
[email protected]
I have had a fish tank for as long as I remember. We lived in California, and I had a 70 gallon bow-front tank - originally tropical. It became very boring and so I invested some money to convert it to Reef.
For about 3 years I maintained it as a reef. Initially I lost a lot of coral and fish - probably thousands of dollars if I'm realistic. About 3 years ago, I sold it on Ebay because we were preparing to move to the East Coast (Boston).
Everytime my husband asks me what I'd like for my birthday, Christmas, 'as a treat', I've said ... A fish tank. I think this Christmas my dream came true!!
So this Christmas, I have a gift certificate for Tropic Isle in Framingham. It's not enough to get me the huge tank I desire, but it's at least 1/3 of the way there. By the end of this week (owing to a business situation) I will know whether I am relegated to a 30 gallon reef ... or upgraded to a 100 gallon reef.
My experience with converting a non-drilled tank has made me rather opinionated. I used to have a refugium hanging on the back - which dripped salt down the wall behind. Also a protein-skimmer. Then a UV thing (can't remember what it was called) because I didn't have a sump and couldn't upgrade to the proper filtration because it was not a drilled tank. I used an external cylinder pump which I rarely cleaned and did water changes only about once every 2 months because I had to drop the water level by 8 inches and it damaged almost every coral at the top. However, I did have many successes - the Xenia did well and I had lots of baby sand-sifter star fish. I loved my tank, but recognized the down-sides of doing it this way.
So, here I am preparing to go straight into reef-dom!
This is what I want to do .. I'd appreciate a few opinions and suggestions if anyone is willing!!
I want to get a flat front tank this time - it's too hard to clean the bow fronted ones with a magnetic cleaner!!. I want to start in at 75 gallons min. External sump - filled with live rock. Not doing the UV thing. Not doing the refugium thing. Not doing the protein skimmer thing unless I need to. I will load it with about 100 lbs live rock. Plenty of live sand. Heaters will be in the sump. If all works out OK will get the metal halide lights so that I can have the corals requiring the best lighting.
I don't want to cycle the tank with the dansels .. they're too hard to remove when cycling is complete and they destroy any other kind of fish (based on my experience). What do you recommend? I would have clowns .. but don't want the cheap cycling fish again.
Last time having loads of tank cleaning crews worked well. I have lots of crabs, sifter starfish, yukky things I can't even touch .. including those brittle stars (which freek me our because they look like spiders from your worse nightmare!!). However, these clean-up guys made the tank stable and I think I've load it up with these guys again - opinions, please?
The tank I have in mind has an overflow system.
I think you probably get the picture. I have an opportunity to do it properly and with my past experience of 3 years in the reef game I am really ready.
Is there anyone from New England out there who can recommend places to get coral/fish? I am obviously getting the tank and supplies/cycling fish from Tropic Isle, but since I've also been in New England for only (almost!) 2 years I'm not really sure of the alternative stores and places to buy supplies.
I would really appreciate ANY comments, feedback, suggestions, advice. What would you do if you could have your set-up chance again???
Mrs Fish
Lexington, MA
Formerly of San Jose, CA
[email protected]