Well, here is the one crummy pic i managed to snap of "Part I delivery night." Amazing what starting work on your tank at 11:30 does for your patience...
Here are three pics of my closed loop system. I had not completed it at the time of these pics, but it's finished now. (Ran return pipe w/ a true union ball valve from the pump up to the CL manifold sitting on top of the tank)
I'm currently hunting mantis shrimp and gorilla crabs while I'm waiting for the water to cycle. I haven't ever gone above 0.5 ammonia or nitrite, so I'm completely happy and a believer in the TBS rock and their shipping methods. The down side is the bad hitchhikers. I've nabbed 2 mantis (found a third, 1/4" one, but couldn't get him out) and 1 gorilla crab so far. I see at least 4-6 more gorillas in there, and hear what sounds like one more larger mantis. I'm trying to hurry, as I don't want to lose all the cool barnacles that are alive on the rock. Here's a pick of yesterday's safari results.
Another neat hitchhiker(s) I found is a 4" sea cuke, who crawls around the glass after hanging out on a rock for two days. The neat thing is, is that the cuke has a small whitish crab clinging to him, which is the size of a pea. I can't tell if the crab is harming the cuke, or eating algae/etc. from the body of the cuke. Anyone have any ideas here?

Here are three pics of my closed loop system. I had not completed it at the time of these pics, but it's finished now. (Ran return pipe w/ a true union ball valve from the pump up to the CL manifold sitting on top of the tank)



I'm currently hunting mantis shrimp and gorilla crabs while I'm waiting for the water to cycle. I haven't ever gone above 0.5 ammonia or nitrite, so I'm completely happy and a believer in the TBS rock and their shipping methods. The down side is the bad hitchhikers. I've nabbed 2 mantis (found a third, 1/4" one, but couldn't get him out) and 1 gorilla crab so far. I see at least 4-6 more gorillas in there, and hear what sounds like one more larger mantis. I'm trying to hurry, as I don't want to lose all the cool barnacles that are alive on the rock. Here's a pick of yesterday's safari results.

Another neat hitchhiker(s) I found is a 4" sea cuke, who crawls around the glass after hanging out on a rock for two days. The neat thing is, is that the cuke has a small whitish crab clinging to him, which is the size of a pea. I can't tell if the crab is harming the cuke, or eating algae/etc. from the body of the cuke. Anyone have any ideas here?