Back in September I was lucky enough to win a complete Marineland 45G Tank/Stand/Sump/Skimmer/Lighting Cube set-up at the MACNA Raffle... wheeee :spin:
It was a bit stressful as prizes had to be taken out of the venue the same day..uh-oh, that stand wasn't going to fit in my little Pontiac..considering the other bazillion things I bought there...lol We managed to cram the tank and sump into the back seat and Joe Yaillio (Atlantis Marine World) was kind enough to take the stand back to NY in his truck for me. (thanks Joe!)
At the very end of the show I scored some rocks from Marco Rocks and the following day I put them into an old 20G FW set up to cure that I had laying around.
The stand & stand has stood 2 feet behind my chair in my home office (annoying the living crap out of me) since early October. Four tanks in a 12 x 12 office (my 120, 33g, my 12g nano and now this 45G tank) isn't pretty, nor is the humidity level. :tired:
This past Saturday I finally got around to taking down my 33G Oceanic and upgrading to the new Marineland tank...yippee!!
I prepped by gathering a bunch of heaters, powerheads, an airpump (for the tank the fish would be housed in during the change), a cover for the temporary fish home (...I have a Hawkfish, known to be jumpers), 4 big totes (moving anenomes, they needed the space so as not to tear any tissue), some muscle to move the tanks themselves (my son), and a bunch of new water.
Speaking of water...this tank (and now my others as well) will be run exclusively using the new ESV Salt. I spoke with Bob Stark of ESV and understand that the ESV salt is especially user friendly to anenomes due to the mixture of elements in the salt - specifically the bromide. Not that it isn't great for all corals, but it will be interesting to see how my group fares
I wanted to use mostly the new marco rocks but had to move over the rocks the anenomes were attached to, so the pics from the first day are a little odd as two, that weren't attached to rocks, got cozy with the tuperware they were moved in. All anenomes were kept fully submerged during the moves into & out of the tanks.
..it was a long day and I'm still not fully done, but the tank is running for the most part. I still have to hook back up my ATO, Aqua Controller, GFO reactor, and a bunch of other stuff I will mention below.
Since I worked alone I didn't stop to take pics..just the ones after I got it into place & filled...
My computer is being a bit quirky lately so I will post the pics in the next post..
It was a bit stressful as prizes had to be taken out of the venue the same day..uh-oh, that stand wasn't going to fit in my little Pontiac..considering the other bazillion things I bought there...lol We managed to cram the tank and sump into the back seat and Joe Yaillio (Atlantis Marine World) was kind enough to take the stand back to NY in his truck for me. (thanks Joe!)
At the very end of the show I scored some rocks from Marco Rocks and the following day I put them into an old 20G FW set up to cure that I had laying around.
The stand & stand has stood 2 feet behind my chair in my home office (annoying the living crap out of me) since early October. Four tanks in a 12 x 12 office (my 120, 33g, my 12g nano and now this 45G tank) isn't pretty, nor is the humidity level. :tired:
This past Saturday I finally got around to taking down my 33G Oceanic and upgrading to the new Marineland tank...yippee!!
I prepped by gathering a bunch of heaters, powerheads, an airpump (for the tank the fish would be housed in during the change), a cover for the temporary fish home (...I have a Hawkfish, known to be jumpers), 4 big totes (moving anenomes, they needed the space so as not to tear any tissue), some muscle to move the tanks themselves (my son), and a bunch of new water.
Speaking of water...this tank (and now my others as well) will be run exclusively using the new ESV Salt. I spoke with Bob Stark of ESV and understand that the ESV salt is especially user friendly to anenomes due to the mixture of elements in the salt - specifically the bromide. Not that it isn't great for all corals, but it will be interesting to see how my group fares
I wanted to use mostly the new marco rocks but had to move over the rocks the anenomes were attached to, so the pics from the first day are a little odd as two, that weren't attached to rocks, got cozy with the tuperware they were moved in. All anenomes were kept fully submerged during the moves into & out of the tanks.
..it was a long day and I'm still not fully done, but the tank is running for the most part. I still have to hook back up my ATO, Aqua Controller, GFO reactor, and a bunch of other stuff I will mention below.
Since I worked alone I didn't stop to take pics..just the ones after I got it into place & filled...
My computer is being a bit quirky lately so I will post the pics in the next post..
Last edited: