Hey everyone! New to the site

helitaiwan963

New member
ey guys,

I've had the tank for about 6 years now, started back in 2005. It crashed about 2.5 years into the adventure and basically the only coral the survived till I went to college last year was a frogspawn. Then while i was at school, the original power compact lighting I had died and my dad was busy with work and i was in Iowa, The tank just sat without lighting. Needless to say, everything crashed and died. My coraline seemed to bloom under these low light conditions(it's next to a window so some light was still available)

But... the tank was still kept running and my dad would top off with RO every few weeks. I got back for summer break this year and decided to start it back up. I tested the water and everything was great! I did a 50% water change and cycled it for 2 days and I added my CUC to the tank along with a Coralife 2x18watt T5 light strip with a 10k bulb and actinc. I let the tank cycle for about another week and a half and got 2 green chromis in the tank. During this time, i started dosing the tank with things like Kent marine calcium, iodide,strontium, and a seachem marine buffer to raise the pH. Since the tank was already pretty stable from so many years, I decided i wanted more fish so I got two TR gold stripped Maroon clown fish. They are still little ones and I don't think they've changed sex's yet. They fought a lot in the beginning but now they seem to get along better and hide in the same cave.

So the bug for wanting coral started again after I saw the fish thriving so I met a local reefer that gave me 2 free kenya tree frags. I did do the research and found that these coral are extremely hardy and do well under lower light conditions. Unfortunately, one of the bigger frags died, but the smaller one is now doing extremely well and I found that it dropped two branches already?! So my research began for coral that do well under lower light conditions and settled upon what i have now in the tank, and i'm looking to expand. I purchased a small rock with a pretty big colony of pom pom xenia and found that a lot of the stalks on that rock were splitting! And they were all falling over and whatnot and i was afraid they weren't going to get enough light so I did my research about fragging them. I fragged 3 stalks to trim my rock colony and stuck them on another big piece of LR in another part of the tank and another I stuck on what was left of a dead frogspawn. I got 3 pretty cool colored zoas on that piece of xenia rock too but the xenia covered one of them up and killed it. Glad to say the xenia frags all survived and are pulsing with life! Then I got a pretty decent frag of Green Star Polyps and those are doing very well too, i'm hoping they spread up and down that middle strip you see it is on right now. Then i got a Condy anemone thinking my maroons would host it but later research told me otherwise.

Everything was doing fine with the lighting I had, but I knew for the stuff I had now to really thrive, i needed more light. So today, on my local craigslist I saw someone posted a 18" current usa nova extreme t5HO fixture that was only a month old for 30 bucks so i went and looked at it. It was in new condition so i picked it up and put it over my tank and wow! It's only been about an hour and a half and the corals all seem to be super happy! The xenia are pulsing like never before! I'm kinda unhappy that the 18" light makes the center of my tank super bright but i guess i should've expected that. I'm starting my build of a canopy tomorrow so it should be better cuz i'll be hanging the lights about 4-5" above the water so the 2 fixtures should keep the tank evenly lit up and not just have the center be super bright. The current usa fixture had a 12k daylight bulb and a 460nm actinic so it's a bit more blue compared to my Coralife, but i'll be setting my timers so the coralife turns on first then the currentusa. I'm very happy with how the tank looks with the light now and it's got 72 watts of T5 power so it should be enough for my future plans with coral. My "to get'" list is a nice piece of frogspawn and some colorful zoa's and a few more mushrooms. I'm still researching if a bubble tip anemone will do well under what lighting i have.

PS: I know the substrate sucks and i'll be adding about 5-6 lbs of white sand in it soon... but i don't want to scoop the stuff i have in there out cuz it's very active and live.

Livestock:
2x Green/blue chromis
2x TR gold striped maroon clown fish
1x Lawnmower Blenny (my favorite fishto watch in the tank!)
7x Red legged hermit crabs
4x asteria snails
1x Coral Banded shrimp
2x Peppermint Shrimp
1x Hawaiian skunk cleaner shrimp
1x Kenya Tree
8x stalks of red sea pulsing pom pom xenia
1x Frag of Green star polyps
1x Condy anemone

Equipment:
-Cps style HOB protein skimmer
-Aquatech HOB filter for occasional carbon sleeves or phosphate sponges
-100 watt heater
-1x Koralia nano powerhead
-1x Aquatec 401 powerhead
-2x Aquatec 201 powerheads

Pictures!
(i did change the nova light so it sits flat now and sorry for the glare)
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DIY canopy i made last weekend:
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And just for fun, my planted 46gal tank with 4x sub-adult red belly piranhas
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Let me know what you think on anything, aquascape, placement of coral etc. I'm always looking for suggestions to improve. Also, anything on if i have enough lighting for what i want to do as far as coral goes would be great... i'm currently the most iffy on bubble tip anemone's. I've read they do best under MH lights. Being a college student in the hobby, my funds just aren't there to invest so much under lighting.

I've also been planning on starting a 8gal oceanic biocube but i have been wandering away from the idea, and try and sell it/trade it for a MH fixture.

Thanks
Eric
 
Hey, welcome here buddy! Nice tank!
Ooops, I don't know why I thought you had a nano, but it's a bigger tank. Get that hallide, or more T5's or LED's!
 
Hey, welcome here buddy! Nice tank!
Ooops, I don't know why I thought you had a nano, but it's a bigger tank. Get that hallide, or more T5's or LED's!

haha, thanks! well a 29 gal is considered a "nano" right? I hoping to get some halides soon. I'm not sure how i'd be able to fit any more T5's in the canopy or how to get it to fit over the tank to be honest. i've been wanting to get some kind of pendent to hang in my canopy and then keep the thin profile coralife light and just get 2x 18watt 460nm actinics to run with the halides.

I know i should get more lights asap but the stuff that are in there now are already doing well. But i can tell it needs more light because the pom pom xenias i have in there are stalky so i read that they are more or less "reaching" for more light even tho they are pulsing very well and multiplying fast. I count at least 8 more "baby xenia"
 
My suggestion for the xenias is to keep them on an island rock on the sandbed. They tend to spread out of control and I don't know if that is the look you want. I've seen tanks completely overrun by xenias. They are hard to get rid off once they start spreading, and they spread fast. I would keep them contained on 1 rock if I were you. They move ver slow, but before you know it, they are pests in your tank. You should either keep them on a solitary rock on the sandbed, or keep them on a rock at the top of the tank, as they tend to spread upwards. I know some people are selling their lights here, or on craigslist.
 
My suggestion for the xenias is to keep them on an island rock on the sandbed. They tend to spread out of control and I don't know if that is the look you want. I've seen tanks completely overrun by xenias. They are hard to get rid off once they start spreading, and they spread fast. I would keep them contained on 1 rock if I were you. They move ver slow, but before you know it, they are pests in your tank. You should either keep them on a solitary rock on the sandbed, or keep them on a rock at the top of the tank, as they tend to spread upwards. I know some people are selling their lights here, or on craigslist.

hmm... i've read about that issue as well but i will contiune to trim them. personally i love xenia. expecially pom poms. Right now they are on the top like that mainly because i'm worried about them getting enough light. they are up high already and already still reaching for more light.

I'm gonna continue looking for MH lights everywhere

Welcome to the site...glad to have you aboard. Your tank looks good so far.

:signwelcomespin:Welcome to CR
Thanks!
 
thanks! its been stable for awhile now.

next thing is that i'm going to seaschor in buffalo grove this weekend to see about some colorful zoas and possibly a bubble tip anemone. I'm going to also pick up some sand, about 15 lbs. As you can see, my substrate consists of sand and some pebbles from the leftover freshwater substrate that used to be in there. Anyway, I plan on just covering the stuff i have now with some of the new sand. I'll just be getting dry stuff cuz i'm sure the sand i have now is full of life. I read about some of the stuff that develops under sand over the years and if it's disturbed, it can be released and kill everything in the tank. So i shouldn't encounter any problems with adding another 1" of sand right? everything i cover that's alive should be able to make it's way out again?


Thanks
Eric
 
Heavier particals in the sand will work themselves to the top. You will probably have to remove the larger pebbles manually otherwise you will eventually always see them.
 
if i remove them, will it be enough to disturb the stuff in the sand that will kill the stuff in my tank? i originally wanted to siff my sand in order to get the big pieces out and put them in my HOB filter so it's like live rock rubble in a refugium... till i read i shouldn't overturn established sand.
 
Hello & Welcome. If you are looking to swap out your substrate I (or probably any other member) would be more than happy to give you a cup full of live sand to help get your sand bed seeded.
 
wow, everyone is so generous in this community! I greatly appreciate the offer, but I do not think that would be needed though. My substrate right now is that pebble mix and sand. Everything is live already and I just want to get rid of those pebbles cuz i think it's super ugly. The rest of the sand should be live.

My main worry is overturning my substrate, will I kill everything in my tank if i do that?
 
how deep is the bed? if it's under like 4 inches i think, you should be fine.

if you are worried, you can do a large water change immediately after you move the sand. keep lots of water ready, and monitor your parameters every hour. either way is doable, latter more expensive though.

and welcome! you can screw around putting rocks all over, the cave/shelf approach is always a popular one, but yours looks just fine to me :D
 
the sand bed is only around 2.5" deep. I think i will do a water change after. I always keep about 10gallons of premixed water ready.

I went to midwest coral farms today and got a lot new coral! I got 2 zoa frags and a frag of ricordia. then i got a nice strawberry coral thats like orange, white, purple, and pink. I'm pretty excited. I stuck the rbta's feet in a nice crevice in my rockwork and it hasn't moved yet and it's stuck down already pretty nicely. I'm excited to see it fully opened once it gets used to my tank!
 
Did you menrion youre a member here. You get a discount by being a member of chicago reefs.
for real???? ****... i had no idea. that would've helped my wallet. lol. everything looked so nice there... i almost bought a clam they had on sale for 35 bucks!

welcome to site Eric and post some pictures with new corals:)

and thanks! Will do... i'm waiting till tomorrow to see if they all open up yet. i got home around 4 pm today and my lights go out at 9 so they didn't have much time in the tank and under the lighting yet. I'll make sure to post pics! I have to play around with the features of my dslr to take better pics of the tank. haha. not used to have to take pics thru glass. the glare makes me mad, haha.

And MCF uses these clear plastic plugs, one already slipped off my rock. I was wondering about the whole super glue gel method. Can i just take the plug out of the water, put some super glue regular/gel and just put it back in the tank and just stick it onto where i want it? Will the chemicals from the super glue do any harm or is it perfectly ok?


Thanks
eric
 
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