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Zarathustra2

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About Zarathustra2

  • Birthday 09/13/1976

Profile Information

  • Location
    NW Austin
  • Tank Size
    24g
  • Gender
    Male

Zarathustra2's Achievements

Elite Reefer

Elite Reefer (6/6)

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  1. Just a couple more critters, some rock and some sand and I am converting to freshwater. Come and get your rock!

  2. Kinda. KH = Hardness of water. Also, do you ever dose Iodine? GSP, like Xenia, needs iodine to move properly. You should be getting enough in water changes but if its been a while between water changes it might be a culprit.
  3. If you need a cup of sand I have some very biodiverse sand i'm willing to trade for a cup of dry sand. I'm over near braker and lamar. feem free to send me a PM.
  4. It sounds like you are on the right path. When i am "Max Dosing" i worry alot about the PH swings though. The only suggestion that I would have would be to take your top off water for the day and divide it in half. Then put the supplements seperately into each half. You can then drip them one at a time with an upside down 20oz water bottle with a hole poked through the cap. This will let the supplement go into your water over time instead of all at once. Note: I do not do this for my daily addition. Just when I'm trying to boost my CA levels.
  5. I had one of these for 6 months and it is a very effective skimmer for almost any Nano aquarium. (<30 Gallons) Bumping for a good deal on a good skimmer.
  6. If you contact Dave (Prof on ARC) from epic reef he has a great deal on sand with a large order he recently got in. It is dry sand, but I will be happy to trade you a cup of my DSB sand for a cup of dry sand. That will give you lots and lots of critters, belive me.
  7. Post to the WIKI!!! austinreefclub.com/page/FAQ

  8. So, you have some nuisance algae making your tank look like the bad part of town. Your algae blenny is absolutely stuffed to the gills. You can't keep acropora. Well, Boo-Hoo, it is your fault. You have the power to fix it. Oh you don't know how? Well, let me tell you a bit about nuisance algae. Most algae issues can be solved with the same few steps. That being said, you should first identify your particular strain of woe. I think that reefcleaner's algae ID page is the most new user friendly one out there. Please visit the ARC Links page for many more ways to ID algae if it is not there. All algae problems can be solved in 3 steps: 1. Manual Removal 2. Removal by CuC 3. Elimination of Nutrients/Light Manual Removal Get in there and take as much out as possible by hand. But wait, with some of these algae's (bubble/velonia is notorious for this) you will just end up spreading the algae more as it's spores go whizzing around your tank. Other algaes have holdfasts that will dig into your live rock and not let you get these rootlike structures out by hand. So what do you do? Get a hard bristle toothbrush and rubberband it to a length of 1/4" tubing. Move as much as you safely can by hand. Then get in there with the siphon-brush and scrub that rock clean. I have also done this with a small wire brush on an item that has a serious hold on the rock. Removal by CuC Snails, Crabs and cucumbers... Oh My!! Check the reefcleaners link above to help identify a CuC member you can add that will take care of this algae. No one CuC member eats everything!!! For instance, as far as I can tell, no snails will eat bubble algae. But, my emerald crabs will power right through it. I avoid a lot of algae problems mainly by starting out with a diverse CuC so they eat the algae before it becomes a problem. For my 90G: 5 Hermits 3 Pepp Shrimp 10 Emerald Crabs 10 Large Nassarius 25 Small Nassarius 20-30 Nerites 10 Marg's 5 Fuzzy Chitons (I just love them) Unknown number of mini ceriths 20 Florida Ceriths 15 Turbo/Turban snails 5 Mexican Turbos 1 Serpant star 1 Black Cuc 2 Algae Blennies Remember to feed your CuC if it is this large . Yes, I like my CuC members on thier own. Elimination of Nutrients/Light Once you have the algae removed/being eaten you need to stop the food that let's it grow. Generally, better husbandry techniques are what is needed here. I will avoid going over filtration methods and instead reccomend you peruse the filtration articles in this Wiki. I do want to go over what you should to help eliminate an outbreak so the better husbandry practices can take hold. 3 day Algae removal process This process is to help kick start your new dedication to your tank and the elimination of this nuisance algae. Think of it kinda like a crash diet for your tank. During these three days where you will not see your sea buddies, spend the time reading up on nutrient control and removal in marine aquariums. This wiki is a great place to start. You can also follow the links section on ARC as well. For three days you will be doing the following: 1. Set your Skimmer to "skim wet." This will help it take out as many nutrients as possible. 2. Start with a 50% water change - Yes, 50% of your total water volume, including sump. Do this water change daily for all 3 days. Yes, this means you will change out 150% of your water volume in 3 days. Yes, this is to remove as many nitrates and phosphates as possible. 3. Turn off your lights - Yes... for 3 days. In Fact, cover your tank with towels so light does not get in. (without your lights on they will need the extra warmth anyways.) 4. Run GFO and Carbon through a reactor if available, a bag if not. This is to remove any remaining DOC after the large water changes. 5. Daily, take a half hour to an hour (during water changes is good) to remove any algae you can get your hands on. Make sure to look very closely for any dead critters or such. After 3 days you should have a great start to your new animal husbandry techniques and a much reduced algae problem that will be easily fixed by lowering your feeding and making sure you run a tight ship in your tank.
  9. I got a sample from Mark and I have to say... my critters love it. I used about a square inch of it and put half on a clip and half i broke into smaller pieces to drop in various corals. I have a algae blenny that won't eat anything but tank raised algae on glass and he went right for this stuff. My clowns grabbed it and pulled it back to thier home. Blastos puffed up around it to eat. If i rubbed it in my hand to make a fine mist I saw my gorgonian polyps grabbing some on the way by. About the only thing in my tank that didn't munch it was my mandarin, and well, its not a copepod so no suprise there. I particularly loved the ease of use of this. Much easier than spot feeding plankton with a baster. Like Mark said above i want to add it to my rotation along with other products. I think it might become the "base" food I use though. Let me know the next time you do an order. If I have any spare cash I would love to go in on a few months supply to add to my rotation.
  10. I have some zoos and shrooms I would be happy to trade for a frag.
  11. Doh! Had a late night last night and forgot the link.
  12. The Wiki is now on-line and available to all, members and non members. We have a few seed articles in place at this time. Please help out by writing an article on something you are passionate about. If you have any questions comments or cencerns let me know. And thanks a lot to our fearless leader for putting this together.
  13. No. Use a siphon to change out ~1G of water to suck the bad stuff out daily. Edit: Clarification, You don't want anything in your QT that you won't be sterilizing between inhabitants. Since you cant sterilize a crab or a snail (they have such little balls) you wouldn't want to add them. Bare bottom, some PVC, a sponge filter and a light. Thats it.
  14. Sorry for not posting earlier. Sold. Thank you very much. The peace of the household could not stand the extra tank.
  15. Wetwebmedia answer copied in below. I think you are pretty much stuck on manual removal and extra water changes. You might want to try some emerald crabs. They seem to eat anything that other guys won't. That being said, why wouldn't you jump up your water changes? Considering that a bucket of salt is around 30-40$ and makes hundreds of gallons of water it is about the cheapest thing we do for our aquarium. Its really pretty easy if you set it up right. And its the most effective maintenance task in our arsenal for almost any issue we see. Below from http://www.wetwebmedia.com/redalgidf3.htm ID of some red algae 7/5/07 Hi Crew! <Hi there, Mich here.> Just wondering if you can ID this red algae for me. <Perhaps, looks/sounds like Gelidiopsis AKA wire algae. The filaments are typically wiry and tough. > It's spreading slowly, but spreading just the same. <They often do that. Gelidiopsis is typically slow growing.> I have already cut my feedings in half to control nutrients. <A good place to start. A refugium with macro algae could help. Please read here and check out the related link in blue http://www.wetwebmedia.com/refugium.htm > I perform 15% water changes weekly. <Excellent.> I also tried a toothbrush to scrub it off and it doesn't come off easy. <Will likely just spread it more... May actually be better to remove a very thin layer off the surface of you live rock using a chisel in an attempt to remove all traces of the algae.>
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