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Derry

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Everything posted by Derry

  1. My understanding was that aqualifters weren't submersible. Do you just have a length of tubing going from your tank/sump to the aqualifter, then on to whatever device you're supplying water to?
  2. I need some plumbing advice, plz. I picked up a Mini-Jet to run my Knopp C calcium reactor. My question is how best to mate the 1/2" Mini-Jet outlet to the 1/4" calc reactor inlet, preferably with a ball valve in between to fine-tune the flow rate into the reactor. Thanks! Derry
  3. Derry

    CO2 tubing

    Dave, some digging in Google revealed that silicone loses 20-30% of the CO2 due to its permeability and is generally listed as the least-preferable option for running C02. I dont' doubt that it will run the reactor, but you might be burning through more CO2 than necessary from the gas diffusing through the tubing.
  4. Derry

    CO2 tubing

    I'm looking for about three feet.
  5. Derry

    CO2 tubing

    Anybody know where I can pick up some 1/4" CO2-compatible tubing locally? I need it to finish setting up my new calcium reactor, and I didn't see any on the BRS site for the latest group buy.
  6. I've got a closed loop driven by a Reeflo Dart (Snapper? The smaller of those two), with four outputs controlled by an OM Super Squirt. There's definitely stronger and more random water movement when it's running. To watch the food particles in the water column, I get some really complex interactions between the water movement created by the closed loop and the water moved by my two K4s and return pump. I don't know that I'd list a closed loops as a gotta-have, but I know my big tank (140 gals) looks "happier" when the closed loop is running.
  7. Derry

    wild shrimp

    FWIW, I've had two rock anemones from Port A in my tank since last July with two onyx clowns and two mandarins, and I've not had any trouble.
  8. Derry

    wild shrimp

    You can get in a LOT of trouble with the wrong snails, esp those that eat other snails. Be sure to do your homework.
  9. Title says it all - where do you run your calcium reactor, in the sump or externally? Please list the pros and cons of your choice. Also, what do you use to supply water to the reactor? If it's in the sump, do you just let it draw on its own? Thanks!
  10. Derry

    wild shrimp

    +1 They're pretty, but they're EXTREMELY territorial. By the time I got rid of mine, the biggest of the four would keep the other three pinned down among the live rock, strafing anybody who dared stick his nose out far enough to be seen. I made a deliberate point of NOT putting them in my main DT.
  11. Derry

    wild shrimp

    Mitchell, I don't have any pics of my rock anemones, but here area couple from marc levenson of the rock anemones he brought back from a Port A trip with MAAST a couple of years ago. Mine have more blue and red in them than these pictured.
  12. Derry

    wild shrimp

    PS - Everything was caught on the jetties using a hand net. The shrimp were caught at night on the big jetty at Port A using flashlights to pick up their eye shine. The various fish and crabs were collected from both the big jetty one night and from a smaller jetty in the state park the next day. I just worked the pools along the sides of the small jetty. BTW, you can find rock anemones in surprising colors deep in between the rocks on the big jetty in Port A. I've got two - the oral disc on the smaller one is about 1", and the bigger is about 2". They prefer things a little darker, so they've made nice accents in the shadows. They've got a MUCH stronger sting/sticky factor than my BTA, but they've not created an problems. I've even got a mandarin in there, and no issues. We found that the trick to collecting these guys is to find the ones that are attached to smaller rocks that you can remove, rock and all. Trying to coax them off of the huge granite boulders didn't work very well. Once you've got them home, take the rock out of the water and repeatedly tap the rock with a hammer near the anemone. Something about the vibrations makes the 'nem let go on its own, so you don't have to worry about tearing the foot. They'll then quickly reattach to whatever new rock you offer. I'd love to hear of someone trying the hammer trick on one of the jetty boulders to see if it works in the field.
  13. Derry

    wild shrimp

    The peppermint shrimp have slowly whittled down to about half the original number, but I think that's from internal population balancing (ie, killing each other off ; ) more than anything else. I've almost always got at least one pregnant pep in the tank at any given point in time, so the remaining shrimp must be fairly happy. I also brought back three hermit crabs and five juvie sergeant majors from that trip. They lived in my smaller tank for four months, and the fish each almost doubled in size before I cleared them out to make room for seahorses. I took care to acclimate everything well on arrival, but I also brought back a bunch of pretty bullet-proof critters, so take all that into consideration as well.
  14. Derry

    wild shrimp

    I brought back about a dozen last summer using a battery-powered pump and airstone in an empty salt bucket. I drilled a hole in the lid of the bucket for the air tubing to minimize the slosh factor. Everything went through a night in the hotel room and two water changes at the beach before driving back to Cedar Park the next afternoon with no losses.
  15. Conspiracy theorists are everywhere...
  16. The last two editions of Advanced Aquarist online have articles on what skimmate is made of and how much DOCs can even be removed by a skimmer.
  17. That's a little TOO commensal for my comfort!
  18. My understanding was a captive lifespan of 5-6 years, easy.
  19. So I take a look at my tank this morning to see one of my green chromis dead and pinned to the side of a K4. No warning whatsoever. All params are within the normal levels, and I've not made any recent changes to the tank. The chromis is one of the original fish in the tank and has been there for almost 3 yrs. It has been eating well and has shown no unusual behavior. Body mass looked good for a slender fish like a chromis. No gill inflammation, no lesions, no bite marks, no torn tissue or missing scales (although spending the night stuck to the k4 roughed up one side, but no major damage was visible). The only thing I saw that was out of the ordinary was a small chunk missing from the gill cover on one side, but the gill underneath looked undamaged. This was my first fish loss in over a year. It's bad enough when someone goes carpet-surfing, or if you find out about a hitchhiker crab when fish start disappearing. At least you know the cause then. I have NO idea why this little guy went belly up, and that always fires up the paranoia machine.
  20. If yours went bungie jumping, a while back I had one go skydiving off a rock about 8" off the bottom. It stood itself up and acted like nuthin' happened. Apparently, it didn't like the strength of the new currents went I added a couple of koralias.
  21. If visiting cyrus is too far a drive, I need to thin the Caulerpa prolifera in my seahorse tank and can get you a decent handful.
  22. If you need a plan b for the big rock, I'm interested.
  23. Pm sent re the steel blue/purple slate zoas
  24. Mine did the same thing when it came in as a 2" frag. Give it another week or two, and those bumps will turn into nubby spikes.
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