- Location
- Marine Park
My name is Fred, and I'm an addict.......(to reefkeeping)
Patrick Donston, the owner of Absolutely Fish in NJ does a great presentation and if you ever get the chance to see him speak you should go. He often speaks of the impact our hobby has on the natural habitat of these animals. He does the usual, don't buy Bali etc and plugs his store and their practices but it got me thinking. Actually it got my wife thinking.
We just came back from St. John's where we went to Trunk Bay in the US National Park at USVI. They have an underwater trail at Trunk Bay that was some of the best snorkeling I've done, Cozumel included. You can go off the trail and around some rocks to find Elkhorn corals larger than I am. There are also some Monti caps that are a good 10 feet across and 5 or 6 feet high.
Anyhow seeing this REALLY made me want to setup a Caribbean tank. It had the opposite reaction for my wife though. It made her feel bad about keeping these fish in such a small area. I said "we'll get a 250!", "but still" she said. "For the cost of running a 250 we could take two vacations like this a year, to Fiji". She did have a point.
Having kept fish for the last 20 years, 2/3 of my life I truly miss having a tank in the house. I thought about setting up a 180 with cichlids or even a freshwater tank for my son's benefit. I just looked over some pics of my 58 gallon and I feel "the bug" again. Seeing some of those sps makes me feel like setting up a 120....today.
The reality though is that some schmuck will come over, go oooh ahhh and go to his LFS and buy a 55 gallon tank with four tangs, two green mandarins, a few clownfish etc etc. Or worse his kids will get "the bug" and years from now they will travel down this road we all love and hate.
So now I'm at a cross roads. The color, shape and pure awe of salt water can't be matched in freshwater. The joy I get from these tanks can't be matched. It would be better though to take the money spent on a reef ($1200-$2500 a year conservatively) and spend it on a neat scuba vacation. I could run a 250 freshwater tank for practically nothing and still have a tank in the house.
I guess I'm asking myself "How much do I love this hobby?" Enough to leave these animals where they belong? Am I the kid that nurses a wounded animal back to health but can't set it free? I keep thinking of the corals down in the Caribbean. They are in BAD shape. Most of them are 80% dead and the mass bleaching that was in the news is not exaggerated. Their reefs are pretty torn up. There's a bacterial infection that has devastated most of them and some commercial aquariums and organizations have begun transplanting healthy corals to damaged areas. Our hobby, as much as we like to think it helps isn't helping.
I spoke to a guy before we left that used to do some transshipping and then some farming. He left the hobby years ago. He said that for every fish that arrives in a store, 10 died. Most stores have some dead fish in the tanks which doesn't make that number much better. It's true we've gotten better at transshipping since he was in the business but not much.
In any event, I'll be trading in some Salt water and reef gear in for Freshwater stuff in the FT forum. My best to you all, good luck with your addiction. I'm going clean, see you in the FW forums.
Patrick Donston, the owner of Absolutely Fish in NJ does a great presentation and if you ever get the chance to see him speak you should go. He often speaks of the impact our hobby has on the natural habitat of these animals. He does the usual, don't buy Bali etc and plugs his store and their practices but it got me thinking. Actually it got my wife thinking.
We just came back from St. John's where we went to Trunk Bay in the US National Park at USVI. They have an underwater trail at Trunk Bay that was some of the best snorkeling I've done, Cozumel included. You can go off the trail and around some rocks to find Elkhorn corals larger than I am. There are also some Monti caps that are a good 10 feet across and 5 or 6 feet high.
Anyhow seeing this REALLY made me want to setup a Caribbean tank. It had the opposite reaction for my wife though. It made her feel bad about keeping these fish in such a small area. I said "we'll get a 250!", "but still" she said. "For the cost of running a 250 we could take two vacations like this a year, to Fiji". She did have a point.
Having kept fish for the last 20 years, 2/3 of my life I truly miss having a tank in the house. I thought about setting up a 180 with cichlids or even a freshwater tank for my son's benefit. I just looked over some pics of my 58 gallon and I feel "the bug" again. Seeing some of those sps makes me feel like setting up a 120....today.
The reality though is that some schmuck will come over, go oooh ahhh and go to his LFS and buy a 55 gallon tank with four tangs, two green mandarins, a few clownfish etc etc. Or worse his kids will get "the bug" and years from now they will travel down this road we all love and hate.
So now I'm at a cross roads. The color, shape and pure awe of salt water can't be matched in freshwater. The joy I get from these tanks can't be matched. It would be better though to take the money spent on a reef ($1200-$2500 a year conservatively) and spend it on a neat scuba vacation. I could run a 250 freshwater tank for practically nothing and still have a tank in the house.
I guess I'm asking myself "How much do I love this hobby?" Enough to leave these animals where they belong? Am I the kid that nurses a wounded animal back to health but can't set it free? I keep thinking of the corals down in the Caribbean. They are in BAD shape. Most of them are 80% dead and the mass bleaching that was in the news is not exaggerated. Their reefs are pretty torn up. There's a bacterial infection that has devastated most of them and some commercial aquariums and organizations have begun transplanting healthy corals to damaged areas. Our hobby, as much as we like to think it helps isn't helping.
I spoke to a guy before we left that used to do some transshipping and then some farming. He left the hobby years ago. He said that for every fish that arrives in a store, 10 died. Most stores have some dead fish in the tanks which doesn't make that number much better. It's true we've gotten better at transshipping since he was in the business but not much.
In any event, I'll be trading in some Salt water and reef gear in for Freshwater stuff in the FT forum. My best to you all, good luck with your addiction. I'm going clean, see you in the FW forums.