- Location
- New York City
Hello everyone.....I've recently joined this site due to the extensive and high quality information all the hobbiest provide here. I am a (very) long time FW keeper (if u can call it that)....but keeping FW is nothing to the detail and complexity of starting a reef or saltwater tank. In my yrs. i have kept many (FW) fish...but my favorite and most extensive experience has been with cichlids both African and S.American varieties. I currently have a LONG established 55 gallon FW tank and I keep (1) buttikoferi (approx. 9'' long)....the tank runs on a Fluval 404 (which I adore). But in the past i have kept green terror, Jack Dempeys, as well as Mbuna cichlids....and many other types of small FW fish....too many to mention.
I have long adimired and the SW and reef tank Ive seen in LFSs and in public aquariums and friends homes.....but i never really had the time nor could i spare the expense of trying to keep one of my own. Recently, i decided to bite the bullet and try to join this (other world) of aquarium life and begin a reef of my own. Over the past few weeks I have read as much as possible on this and many other sites including Nano-Reef.com.....i slowly but surely have begun collecting most of the material i believe i will need to embark on this journey. Luckily, because of my many yrs of FW keeping (both at home and at work as well as helping a number of friend start up their own FW tanks) I had most of what i needed already at hand.
I will begin with a 30gal. long tank, i have a whisper HOB filter, a heater, a koralia powerhead, just purchased a hydrometer, a 36" SolarMaxHO lamp, some reef mix, a new thermometer, and after realizing that the stand i already had would not do......i ordered a new stand form Petco (still waiting to receive that). After i receive my stand (hopefully later this week) i will begin mixing my water and soon after will purchase live rock and live sand.....i am hoping to use a "natural filtration" method as decribed @ Nano-Reef.com ( www.nano-reef.com/articles/?article=3 )
I've noticed that many hobbiest out there have many opinions as to whether or not to use skimmmers, sumps, refugiums, dosing....etc...etc.
At least for me...as an untrained and untested SW hobbiest it seems that the 'natural' method offers the most affordable option to begin this endeavour. Any and all comments, help, suggestions, opinions, or (constructive)criticisms will be welcome. Regard me as a complete noob even though i am a FW keeper....because as i read more and more the less i realize i know.....who was it that said " the first step to enlightenment is to realize that you know nothing......"lol.......
Thanks
I have long adimired and the SW and reef tank Ive seen in LFSs and in public aquariums and friends homes.....but i never really had the time nor could i spare the expense of trying to keep one of my own. Recently, i decided to bite the bullet and try to join this (other world) of aquarium life and begin a reef of my own. Over the past few weeks I have read as much as possible on this and many other sites including Nano-Reef.com.....i slowly but surely have begun collecting most of the material i believe i will need to embark on this journey. Luckily, because of my many yrs of FW keeping (both at home and at work as well as helping a number of friend start up their own FW tanks) I had most of what i needed already at hand.
I will begin with a 30gal. long tank, i have a whisper HOB filter, a heater, a koralia powerhead, just purchased a hydrometer, a 36" SolarMaxHO lamp, some reef mix, a new thermometer, and after realizing that the stand i already had would not do......i ordered a new stand form Petco (still waiting to receive that). After i receive my stand (hopefully later this week) i will begin mixing my water and soon after will purchase live rock and live sand.....i am hoping to use a "natural filtration" method as decribed @ Nano-Reef.com ( www.nano-reef.com/articles/?article=3 )
I've noticed that many hobbiest out there have many opinions as to whether or not to use skimmmers, sumps, refugiums, dosing....etc...etc.
At least for me...as an untrained and untested SW hobbiest it seems that the 'natural' method offers the most affordable option to begin this endeavour. Any and all comments, help, suggestions, opinions, or (constructive)criticisms will be welcome. Regard me as a complete noob even though i am a FW keeper....because as i read more and more the less i realize i know.....who was it that said " the first step to enlightenment is to realize that you know nothing......"lol.......
Thanks