Jump to content

Online ordering liveaquaria.com


Joel Tamez

Recommended Posts

Everyone has ordered from live aquaria. No problems.

I think most people would tell you that if you are ordering rock on line, it should be dead. Saves on cost ( lighter, cheaper base price), no nasty hitch hikers, and you'll get a cycle using live rock due to die off anyways (although it will be shorter).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think it's too new to know for sure. I have a piece in my nano and it looks great. But; it costs more than 'real' live rock.

If you are starting a new tank and are dead set on using live rock right from the start, buy it locally (lfs or someone taking a tank down). You can usually get it cheaper than buying on line/shipping.

In fact, someone recently posted about selling live rock.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dry rock becomes live rock in the end. The benefit to DR is it's pest free (aiptasia, bad crabs, etc), usually cheaper, you can play with your aqua scraping outside the tank, usually environmentally friendly. Downside is it will take a bit longer to cycle the tank, and you have to wait for it to get covered in coralline algae.

Like I said before, unless you can get all the LR you need locally (saves on shipping) I think you'd be better off with DR.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Liveaquaria.com is a supurb seller and I don't think twice before ordering from them.

As for dry or live, I've done both. Dry rock is easy. You can drill it or cement it in your garage without worrying about anything dying. You won't have to worry about it leaching phosphates or anything into the water and you don't get any hitchhikers (good or bad). However, it takes 2-3 months for it to really color up and look natural. It also doesn't come with live bacteria so stocking has to be done slowly. Dry rock is the cheapest option.

Uncured rock is super fun. The rock comes with all sorts of stuff and you really get to see the tank come alive if you cure it in your tank. You get everything, both stuff that you don't want and stuff that you are excited to have. Uncured rock has to cure and during that time you shouldn't add any stock to the tank. Of course you don't need too! Every day you'll wake up and see something new growing or crawling around. Again, both good and bad. Uncured rock from liveaquaria.com is about the same as dry rock and often goes on sale for $1.80 a pound.

Second hand live rock is great. Typically, the rock has been cured for years and you don't get any hitchhikers that you don't want. The rock is wet and has the bacteria all ready to go for a great start. Unfortunately, there are more bad tanks than good tanks out there and you have to be careful not to end up with a tank full of undesirable algae or aiptasia. Second hand live rock is normally $2-4 per pound.

I have had the most success with dry rock, but it's boring and requires a bottle of bacteria to get it started. Second hand rock has some good pros but it has the most undesirables than dry and uncured rock. Uncured is the most fun and the most work. If you get uncured rock then I recommend 6 months before stocking so that you make sure none of the crazy stuff remains. You will also start with an ich free tank!

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

MIddle ground is manufactured LR (like real reef) which several LFSs carry. Like sascha said, dry rock is cheaper and removes pests from the equation. LR gives you more biodiversity at the expense of cost and pest risk.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I used the BRS pukani dry rock and really like it. Folks have already described the pros/cons of dry rock. I chose longer time to come alive vs unwanted hitchhikers. I did have to deal with it\\the dry rock releasing phosphates for several weeks, but I expected that and planned for it. I think it is great looking rock though

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I used the BRS pukani dry rock and really like it. Folks have already described the pros/cons of dry rock. I chose longer time to come alive vs unwanted hitchhikers. I did have to deal with it\\the dry rock releasing phosphates for several weeks, but I expected that and planned for it. I think it is great looking rock though

+1 on the BRS dry pukani rock. I used it to fill up my 210-gal and it was nice that they allowed me to request the type of rock (i.e. give me the largest rocks you got). I combined it with my existing live rock in the new tank and it seeded in no time.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

aquadome does have a really nice selection of LR, but If your planning on stocking a larger tank completely with Iive rock IMO the price isn't worth it.

Ill hop on the BRS dry rock band wagon and say if your ordering online it's the way to go. I just put mine in a plastic bin with a few live pieces from the dome and RCA. Add 2 cheap amazon pumps for circulation, start the farmerTy fertilizer plan(adding skimmate to the bin) and 2 months later wala! beautiful base and island rocks ready for some intimate encounters with super gel.

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...