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Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » December 31st, 2013, 11:37 am

take it slow but keep looking for any cyano or other types of algae that might be starting to grow. The algae blenny will take care of any unwanted stuff, but it wont eat cyano. Since you new to the hobby also, you might see your sand getting a lil brown and my want to get a sand sifting gobie.........trust me, it looks cool but it will throw sand on every single coral in your tank and the corals will eventually die.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby UML » December 31st, 2013, 10:54 pm

Image

Started off with one mushroom

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » January 4th, 2014, 5:31 pm

Nice mushrooms UML,

Check out this LFS in Germany :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GC0aXnKQY-E

My wife will surely ban me from there ..... :mrgreen: :mrgreen:

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby UML » January 5th, 2014, 6:46 pm

thx seeing some growth in hammer coral and candy cane as well

will post some pics later

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » January 5th, 2014, 7:42 pm

UML wrote:thx seeing some growth in hammer coral and candy cane as well

will post some pics later



The way how you say some growth, you making it sound like it slow

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby UML » January 5th, 2014, 9:25 pm

Seeing it everyday I don't notice sthe growth. Only when people visit and mention the growth I know. Unlike with one mushroom and now 20+

Mushroom kinda parasitic all over my tank.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » January 5th, 2014, 9:39 pm

yeah.........I know what you mean. Candy canes are slow growers though. Hammers and frogspawns grow fast for me though. I just constantly fragging. I have one type of mushroom in particular that spreading like wildfire now.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby UML » January 5th, 2014, 9:45 pm

Candy cane not that slow though it splits kinda regularly from 3 I think I have bout 7 heads now. Eyeing the frogspawn will get one sooner or later.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » January 5th, 2014, 11:13 pm

Frogspawn and grape corals are nice to have

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » January 15th, 2014, 8:31 pm

bumping

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby greenlime100 » January 19th, 2014, 12:41 pm

Like everything smooth with everyone lol.

Waiting for raj to get more corals right now. If anyone has any soft coral frags to sell, PM me if possible with some pics.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby ziggy_dappa » January 19th, 2014, 7:02 pm

Got some lps if you're interested.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby kstt » January 26th, 2014, 8:14 am

Anyone have a black clownfish to sell? I looking for one to buy.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby vs_unique23 » January 30th, 2014, 1:05 pm

wtb a blonde naso tang. pm me or call 374-0414

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » January 30th, 2014, 2:05 pm

Thats a hard thing to come by..........I know for sure raj doesnt have.
Then again you might be lucky. They get very large though.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » February 2nd, 2014, 10:37 am

bumping the thread............

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » February 6th, 2014, 10:21 pm

Cant understand how it have so much saltwater men on the forum but yet still nobody trying to keep the thread alive by posting pics or sharing some kinda info. Show pics of your new coral, your new fish, your tank, some new pump, lights or equipment you got and how it working. Show us some before and after pics. Realize men refuse to share any kind of info on this forum. Come on fellas

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby thatlife » February 7th, 2014, 8:36 am

^ lol
ok i'll play


2 month old tank :stalk:

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby superman cre8tions » February 7th, 2014, 5:14 pm

*thatlife - isnt it a little to soon for a dragonet in that tank ? I added one of those in my tank after about 7 mths , lost him 4 months later .
The tank looks gr8 , what size is it ?

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby meccalli » February 7th, 2014, 6:02 pm

it's pretty :)

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » February 7th, 2014, 6:10 pm

superman cre8tions wrote:*thatlife - isnt it a little to soon for a dragonet in that tank ? I added one of those in my tank after about 7 mths , lost him 4 months later .
The tank looks gr8 , what size is it ?



that's so true cause they only eat copepods. 2 mths is when thing now starting to get going. You should see him constantly picking at stuff all on the rocks, glass & sand. They eat whole day. Very rare they accept dry food.
The tank really looking great
Last edited by HondaB20B on February 7th, 2014, 6:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » February 7th, 2014, 6:16 pm

That life, surprised you taking slightly difficult corals like the hammer and the candy canes (that floating in the bag) to start with. You should be trying with the easier corals first. Just make sure your Alk & Cal within range. you will be good.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby thatlife » February 7th, 2014, 6:50 pm

the mandarin feeds on the copepods and other small stuff crawling on the sand

my tank is loaded with it, i added the marc weiss reef bugs
i'm not sure if thats what contributed to it, but my glass and rocks and sand is full of it, the mandarin picks and eats on it all day, lots of them crawling on the algae in the tank


the tank is a biocube 29, but I upgraded the filtration and pump and a nano chiller (light upgrade soon)
running a media basket in the sump with chemi pure elite and some phosban

as for the corals, I went on raj advice
so far, everything is growing
the candy cane and hammer are new though, and the pieces i took are very small
so we'll see how that goes

so far I haven't had any major problems

my only concern is a lawnmower blenny, that has some size
he was good at getting rid of the algae but now hes picking at any fish that comes near his side of the tank
may get rid of him eventually

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby UML » February 7th, 2014, 6:58 pm

Image

Tank looking good that life.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » February 7th, 2014, 7:42 pm

Simple chemistry MUST-knows for tank health

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. your salt mix is not just salt. It's dry seawater. And that means not only salt, it's calcium, magnesium, iodine, selenium, boron---read the label on your salt mix.

2. evaporation never evaporates the minerals. It only evaporates the water.

3. animals and plants suck up part of the minerals. So TWO actions unbalance your tank---evaporation increases the mineral concentration---and animals and plants take the minerals they need and leave what they don't. This means certain minerals run lower and lower and certain ones don't---they just pile up. As you add more fresh ro/di (water that's ONLY hydrogen and oxygen, with NO minerals) your tank gets no more minerals. And your shortage of what the animals and plants are using most gets bigger and bigger. Water changes, 20% a month, replenish the missing minerals, but they're alway playing catchup.

4. Salt mixes are NOT all the same. Reef salt contains a high amount of what corals need AND what fish need. Marine salt for fish-onlies is lower in calcium and other minerals. That's why the price difference.

5. Now---the nitty gritty of chemical balance in your tank. First, the balance is set by your salt brand. The more you mess with that, the worse your water. Translation: don't go dumping supplements into your tank unless you've got the corresponding test. They don't sell these things together because they don't run out at the same rate, but your lfs should stress, with every supplement---you need a test. And you need a logbook. If you turn up a shortage, you dose until you put the RIGHT amount into your tank, with a little leeway; and you test again next week to figure out how fast that's running low. And you dose to stay in the 'good zone', NOT as make-up after your water's gone wonky. Dose to the TREND of the numbers, the way when you're balancing something in your hands, you don't let it swing way to one side before you correct it back to center. There is NO one answer to these things. Every tank is different. And staying in the center of a 'good numbers' zone is best: that gives you a little leeway in either direction.

6. THREE readings go in 'lock' to keep your water good. These three are: the alkalinity of your water, the amount of calcium in your water, and the amount of magnesium in your water. Those of you with freshwater experience are used to tracking PH. Alkalinity is the thing most reefers track. Get it between 8.3 and 9.3 on the KH scale.
The second reading is your Calcium level. It should be between 420 and 500. Below that---your snails' shells start dissolving. And your fish's bone and muscle suffer. The third reading is Magnesium. All you people who want coralline to grow---just keep this one at 1300. But it does a lot more than supply coralline. It LOCKS the other two readings in a 3-way balance. Keeping everything in that relationship will make everything happy.

7. Remember that business about plants and animals using up minerals? Calcium and magnesium are the ones animals use bigtime. Plants---use phosphate and nitrate. Yes, even those chemicals are useful. Plants grow like mad with phosphate. Grow them in your sump, divide the mass in half periodically and get rid of it, and you've just tossed a lot of phosphate and nitrate. That's what a fuge does. And the reason not to use conditioned tapwater? City water grows plants. Algae. A lot of it. The conditioners don't remove phosphate.

8. Dosing: you must dose to keep your calcium supply up if you have stony coral OR clams. Hand-dosing is just fine if you don't. You should be able to keep up with the mineral consumption problem if you have fish and softies, including anemones. Just stay in the target range, and do your water changes.

If you have, or want to have, stony coral, you need to get onto that calcium situation the minute you put them in the tank. They come in 'asleep'. Given good lighting (a requirement for stony coral) and correct chemistry---they'll put out a finger to feel the water. And they'll start waking up. Hungry---because they've not eaten in a while. And what they want is calcium. A lot of it. They'll suck it right out of your salt mix, until your snail shells start dissolving. So you have to put it in. 3 little coral frags can take heaping teaspoons worth of calcium supplement---daily---and at nearly twenty dollars a jar, this could get ruinously expensive. But there ARE cheap ways to give them what they need. Kalk drips are the cheapest. They can fully supply a 50-60 gallon packed reef. Above that you get into calcium reactors, which can supply much larger reefs. There is also the Balling method. And the 2-Part. Tank size and coral load will determine what you need.

9. aging tank: reading all this should tell you that the older a tank gets, the more little imbalances and shortages it accumulates. Age has benefits, but it also has problems. I recommend, at least every couple of years, an aggressive program of semi-weekly 20% water changes, so you can sort of re-set the balance. It's my own notion, but I think it does a bit to replenish the things far down the list of reef-salt ingredients.

Some lil reading to keep in mind that I got off another site.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby greenlime100 » February 7th, 2014, 11:11 pm

Been a while since I had a good read on tank chemistry like that.

Looking to upgrade my wavemakers soon. Most likely looking at 2 mp10 or just 1 mp40 for my 100gal.

Not much new coral on my part. Just this and a couple red mushrooms
1391829020936.jpg

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby UML » February 8th, 2014, 7:47 am

is a 50% water change every 3-4 weeks too much?

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby HondaB20B » February 8th, 2014, 8:18 am

UML wrote:is a 50% water change every 3-4 weeks too much?



50% good like if you have a serious bacterial bloom or like if you had some major death of fish or corals and all your parameters out of whack. like Temp, nitrates, ammonia or phosphates. Other than that, 15-25% (depending on volume) every 3-4 weeks is good. If its a last resort well you really dont have a choice. Thats not all the time it will be done. So much of a water change can upset your parameters and shock your fish, corals or inverts. The least amout of fluctuation you can attain in your system the better. I change 50 gal every 3-4 weeks (mostly 4) which only works to about 25% of my water volume. I get no kind of fluctation of my PH or other stuff. It also depends also on how much and what you feed your fish and corals and how effectively your skimmer is working.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby dgobo » February 8th, 2014, 10:19 pm

Great info there guys, anyway got a little free time the past week so I finally got some things done to the long overdue tank. Image
Image
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Image

I'm just circulating fresh rodi water to check for leaks and flush the system out.
I've been monitoring the temps and it bounces around the 79's F, so I'm hoping no chiller would be required.

Tomorrow I should have salt water in tank with the bacteria and other conditioners in got by Raj to get the system up and running. If all goes well I'm hoping to have fish and corals soon.

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Re: Trinituner Reefers, Saltwater Aquarium Fish Keepers

Postby madman_devin » February 9th, 2014, 3:10 am

Always loved the mandarin, tank looks good !


thatlife wrote:the mandarin feeds on the copepods and other small stuff crawling on the sand

my tank is loaded with it, i added the marc weiss reef bugs
i'm not sure if thats what contributed to it, but my glass and rocks and sand is full of it, the mandarin picks and eats on it all day, lots of them crawling on the algae in the tank


the tank is a biocube 29, but I upgraded the filtration and pump and a nano chiller (light upgrade soon)
running a media basket in the sump with chemi pure elite and some phosban

as for the corals, I went on raj advice
so far, everything is growing
the candy cane and hammer are new though, and the pieces i took are very small
so we'll see how that goes

so far I haven't had any major problems

my only concern is a lawnmower blenny, that has some size
he was good at getting rid of the algae but now hes picking at any fish that comes near his side of the tank
may get rid of him eventually

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