
rancor1
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Everything posted by rancor1
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Fish compatibility - yellow tang getting aggressive
rancor1 replied to dmatt56's topic in General Discussion
Depending on how your tank is configured - you could either create a "safe haven" - a cave or alley where the angel can retreat to and get out of the line of sight of the tang until they settle down. Alternatively, if you can, I would suggest removing all your fish - completely rearranging your rock/decor and then returning them to the tank. This is disorienting for the fish and if the tang is being territorial, it may break him out of it - new territories will develop. -
I'm drilling the 40 this week and working out the plumbing. I'll let you know how it goes.
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Some times you just have to say what the $%#$ and act on an impulse. Especially for that crazy pricing - awesome. Kudos to the vendor for honoring it - they get more word of mouth for being upstanding and "good hearted". Contrast that with some of the airlines when they have a price mistake and then backout of the offer. It costs them way more in negative publicity than a plane load of $1.99 fares to Europe. I like using Foster and Smith - my only beef is the shipping from multiple locations - my wallet is not a fan.
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I've got a 40 gallon breeder I'm converting into a mangrove lagoon to add to my system. I'm in the middle of designing it now - I'm going to use dead live rock to create a rough horse shoe shape in the middle with about 2 inches of sand on the bottom, plus a 9 inch change in elevation, and another bank of sand, held in by the rock. My thought is to use two drains of different heights and two pumps flowing water in from a master sump. The idea is that the first pump fills the first drain. The second pump on a timer surges water in overflowing the first drain's capacity and slowly filling the tank to the 2nd drain level - ideally a little bit above the top sand line. After a flood period, the second pump kicks off and and the water level falls to normal, simulating a tidal surge. I'm going to plant it with red mangroves and was looking at fiddler crabs and other shore line type critters as possible residents. I was considering adding some fish. I saw the idea for this set up in an older aquarium design book - they showed it with mud skippers - but because of the skipping, not ideal for an open top. Also, I'm worried about marooned fish at flood tide - so I was going to try mollies. Interesting, yet not expensive enough that I'm going to cry if they decide to try sunbathing on the beach. I've been scouring the web for ideas on compatible plants and animals that will be content with a 1.025 sg tank.
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I'm working my way up from a fish only "reef" to add coral back into my set up. I've got a pile of live rock - probably 200lbs - some of it is "old" (it's been in my tank for about 8 years now) and some of it was dead - rock I got as part of a tank buy out which had been allowed to dry out as the water evaporated. That "dead" rock is in a QT tank right now running to hopefully be recolonized by bacteria and to allow any dead life to rot off. Before I start adding back coral, I'd like to recharge it and add back all the worms and various no-see-ums that were in my rock new. I had thought of putting a small amount to cure into the main tank and the sump to allow it be seed stock. Or should I bite the bullet and buy some more - either pre-cycled locally from a store (at fairly steep prices) or online and then cycle it before adding it. Or am I being crazy? Is there another alternative short of driving to the shore with a bucket and shovel? Also - how much "seed" should I get?
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Paul - that looks really great. Is the idea to allow water flow under your rock to prevent an anoxic zone from forming?
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No worries - thanks for the reply.
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Would you be willing to part with the formerly live rock seperately? My moving up from a 90 reef to crossfingers a 240 - and some recolonizeable live rock would cut my bill considerably.
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The Dangers of Zoos......I found out the hard way
rancor1 replied to steveoutlaw's topic in General Discussion
Glad you're OK - in general - it's a bad idea to get sick in a way that makes doctors go: "Wow! That's a first!" -
Zoanthid toxin H-E-double hocky sticks update
rancor1 replied to steveoutlaw's topic in General Discussion
I have a box of unpowdered medical exam gloves I keep on hand for poop scooping and invert handling. I recommend them. -
Post it for free. I'd certainly have taken it. The bubble flow on the sea clone gets set by adjusting the airflow into the pump. There was a little air value that you tighten and untightened to add more or less bubbles to the stream.
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Wow - talk about overreaction. I used mine for 2 years and it was adequate for my starter system. It worked fine for live rock, fish, and some basic corals. I'm still using it for a temporary house for some fish in a 29 gallon while my live rock finishes curing for my next tank. So, as a beginner, I wouldn't throw it out. It may not be the greatest ever, but it suffices.
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If I have a hard to find item, I'll try them. They've got a wider selection than the chains. LF prices - expensive. I've bought freshwater fish there, but salt is just too expensive.
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I actually have gotten some hardware there - they've got a huge selection for virtually any pet right under one roof. Prices were pretty good. I found a protein skimmer there for $10 less than I could online. But, it's a haul and their saltwater livestock prices are on the high side.
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Appreciate the advice and offers. I may take you up on some. The tank is brand new and the live rock is curing now...I'm actually going home today to finish up the sump - I'm going to run a refugium underneath to grow forage the tangs in my 90 gallon reef. Anyway - thanks for the advice -
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I actually got the dog face when I bought out a guys system this spring. He's been in 29 while my LR cures, but he's going to get too big for it to be a long term home. Foster and Smith lists them as a species they carry, but don't have any available now. Actually, checked their carribean vendor - Etropicals: http://www.etropicals.com/product/prod_Dis...amp;pCatId=1250 They've got one for $15. I've ordered from them before and had good luck. Actually - if you decide to buy from there - try putting together a group buy. I might be in for some inverts.
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I've got a dogfaced puffer intended for a mainly fish only tank in my living room. I know they aren't reef safe, but I was wondering if anyone knew of any corals or inverts that I could add to the tank that might spice it up a little without a high probability of becoming snackage.
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WSSC will provide you info for what's in your water.
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Already been there.....great great site - just need the raw materials.....what did yours run?
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I'd like to build my own refugium - anyone know a place in the area I can get the right acrylic and tools to do the job?
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Angelfish being bred in Idaho!?
rancor1 replied to Charlie97L's topic in Conservation & Sustainability
I'd like to know which gov't program funded that. -
I was checking out a dive operation in the Turks and one of their promo pictures was a lionfish. I'd say their native now. NOAA actually has a public information program called "Habitatitude" that's intended to education the aquarium hobby on the dangers of exotics releases, including plants and inverts. http://www.habitattitude.net/ I'd say it's a major issue considering they're pulling lion fish off of long island and pacus in Wyoming.
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I started with a small hippo tang in my 90 and added the yellow. There was some tail chasing by the yellow, but they've got established holes now (my rock is set up to create many swimthroughs and caves) and actually feed off of the algae clip together without trouble. I think the key is lots of distinct areas to claim, rearranging the rock work, and reintroducing your trouble maker.
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I think it's a Chinese knockoff of an Aquafuge. I've got one. It looks identical, except for the outflow and powerhead - oh it as looks like they skipped the top cross pieces. I like my hang on the back, though it's a pain to remove it if you have to. I'd be concerned about the lack of cross supports though - once you add sand and water, those things are heavy. In general, the budget concious guy in me is conflicted. It's a good deal - but it's also fairly directly taking money out of the pocket of an American company that manufactures in America (at least I think all their production is US).
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Do you find your damsels bother your chromis or do they leave them alone?