I'm a newbie, so I don't know very much about salt-water tanks. But my trip to the lfs was a bit shocking.
I just visited a small local fish store, and the owner who had done business in the same spot for over 20 years tells me that his water is 17 years old. He occassionally tops of the aquariums when evaporation drops the water levels, but he hasn't done any water changes in that 17 year span. Is this possible? (By the way, most of his tanks either have no filtration system or the filters are about 17-years-old and are crusted over.)
He also showed me a small one gallon tank with a "Nemo" swimming happily inside. Below the micro-tank, there was a piece of masking tape with a date inked on it: 9/17/03. Sand, water, an air pump, and this little clownfish in a one gallon tank -- Can this work for me too?
Finally, he informs me that the industry has duped its unwary customers into believing that all these high-tech devices are necessary for a healthy salt tank. He tells me to buy a simple setup with nothing more than a tank, an air pump, some regular sand, a few cleaner crabs and shrimp, and possibly a macro-algae to take care of the Nitrates. After cycling for 6 weeks, he says to add some fish. That's all. What do you think? Have we all been duped?
I just visited a small local fish store, and the owner who had done business in the same spot for over 20 years tells me that his water is 17 years old. He occassionally tops of the aquariums when evaporation drops the water levels, but he hasn't done any water changes in that 17 year span. Is this possible? (By the way, most of his tanks either have no filtration system or the filters are about 17-years-old and are crusted over.)
He also showed me a small one gallon tank with a "Nemo" swimming happily inside. Below the micro-tank, there was a piece of masking tape with a date inked on it: 9/17/03. Sand, water, an air pump, and this little clownfish in a one gallon tank -- Can this work for me too?
Finally, he informs me that the industry has duped its unwary customers into believing that all these high-tech devices are necessary for a healthy salt tank. He tells me to buy a simple setup with nothing more than a tank, an air pump, some regular sand, a few cleaner crabs and shrimp, and possibly a macro-algae to take care of the Nitrates. After cycling for 6 weeks, he says to add some fish. That's all. What do you think? Have we all been duped?