cjdevito":2il44zug said:
Low rock on the left, high growing on the left. High rock on the right, low growing on the right. That's my recommendation
Hmm. I'm not sure why it is (probably not the need to hide the overflow/return in retrospect), but I much prefer low on right, high on left. Maybe it's more that I want a light, open area on one side and having the overflow/return sat on the left makes it harder to achieve there (particularly once it starts to get covered in corraline).
Still looks good, but I think I prefer your first instinct and how you had it yesterday. I'd use the hidden 'cove' to advantage.... lots of different ideas spring to mind. Anchorage for gorgonians, whose bottom few inches are generally the least interesting. Anemones... a pizza would go great there, although your other inhabitants probably wouldn't appreciate it. A couple of mini carpet anemones (s. tapetum I think?) could be amazing there as well. Very low flow LPS like a bubble coral or a fox coral. Just off the top of my head
Interesting ideas, but none of those (aside from s. tapetum, which I can't get here anyway!) are really things I'd like to have in the tank anyway. What I might do is put another rock back in the position the larger rock was in, to recreate the cove, but with a lower peninsular, so it's easier to see into. But I might have to think it over for a while. I'm not 100% happy with the larger rock sitting on top, that's for sure, as it's not rock solid. I don't want any falls!
Don't give up hope... I just found my first bristleworm tonight, over a month after adding the rock.
That's encouraging! I guess there might be some very small ones hidden away, particularly in the latest couple of rocks. I was concerned that as the rocks are matured in hanging cages (from what I can work out), they might not have any bristleworms make it to them while in the ocean. On the positive side, still no sign of crabs or mantis (the rocks might be too small for them to have settled in, but I think they were also checked for crabs/mantis before being sent, which probably helps, as does the hanging cage factor). Still it's early days...
Depends both on species and conditions. I've heard of the rare occasion where they've multiplied like mad in someone's tank, but that's very much the exception. I've never personally had one in any of my tanks, so there's little practical advice I can offer on it's care.
Thanks anyway. I won't be devastated if they don't take off, but it's certainly a cool critter to be able to observe, so I hope I can at least keep this one (or two) alive.
Heh. Every fish species on the short list I have for possible inclusion in my tank (and which I'm jumping through hoops to find), they have. Although if the exchange rate is what I think it is, some of their offerings are very high priced compared to what I'd expect.
Indeed, things are expensive here and I think this place is more expensive than most. On the other hand, you're getting stock direct from the people catching the fish off the reef, which is kind of attractive, partly as I think it is valuable income in the poorest prefectures in Japan, directly linked to keeping the reef as healthy as possible. The reefs off Ishigaki island are much healthier than the reefs off the main island in Okinawa (devastated by construction site run-off) and this might help create the constituency within Ishigaki to keep it that way. On the other hand, I will probably only buy from them if I can't find somewhere where I can see the fish in a tank before purchasing.
I'm seriously leaning towards an Okinawa biotope tank at the moment actually. I think it'd be kind of cool to have a tank with rock and fish all from Okinawa. Trouble is, it's not permitted to take any stony corals from the wild in Okinawa, so I wouldn't be able to buy LPS that way. So it might end up being a biotope only in terms of fish...