Well what it took to get things going again was seeing the equipment I needed at the right price. I had been thinking the time was right for me to get back into the hobby and I was visiting various pet stores and asking all sorts of questions about what I needed. First thing I new I needed was a new filter because the old Magnum filter was not working and I needed to replace it, but with what? I found the largest canister filter available on sale for half price at a local store who sold salt water fish (SWF) and all the equipment needed to keep them including live rock. So I went home and started researching that canister filter and all the other things I would need to get started again and that's when I learned about live rock and how it acted ass a filter. So on August 23, 2009 I went down to the store and bought that great big filter (the Marineland 360 multi-stage canister filter), and I went home and started rinsing out all my crushed sea shell sand bed that was still in the tank the whole time it was in storage. I spent the better part of that whole weekend washing that gravel with vinegar and rinsing repeatably. I also did some research on the proper lighting I would need to keep the live rock purple and full of Coraline that I was going to be putting in. After visiting a few individuals who were selling their equipment, most of them were home made style lights or the king that you put into a great big fish tank cabinet, I decided to order a brand new hood for my tank that came with four sets of 65 watt true actinic lights and two 250 watt metal halides lights and for moon light effects it had 6 blue LED lights and to keep everything cool it had a fan built into the hood. So I ordered that hood through e-bay and bought it from a business in Texas, that was the first major purchase I had ever made through the Internet and man I was nervous. I ended up paying three hundred for the hood and eighty for tax and duty to bring it into Canada for a grand total of three hundred and eighty dollars, that same light hood was selling at one of the other pet stores for eleven hundred dollars, saving me seven hundred and twenty dollars. That next Monday I went to my nearest bottled water store and bought a couple of five gallon water bottles for twenty bucks each and started filling my fish tank with pure reverse osmosis bottled water, each water fill cost me a two bucks. After making seven trips to the water store throughout the week after work each time, my tank was darn near full and ready for some live rock and fish. That next weekend I went down to the store and bought my first round of live rock and put them into a couple of old plastic 5 gallon milk bones containers which I washed with vinegar water and rinsed thoroughly, the first round was 35lbs which I got for half price which worked out to $4.50 per pound. I ended up going back to the store two more times that day and cleaned them out of all but one or two rocks for there fish to use. In one of my trips I noticed a small little fish at the bottom of my bucket, I added her to the tank not thinking she would make it, but what the heck I had nothing to lose. I named that little fish Zena because she looked like a zebra only purple and grey. All in all I now had 80lbs of Jakarta live rock and six Mexican turbo snails, and a six lined wrasses, which the sales clerk never charged me for, all for $360.00. So my total investment up to date was $229.00 for the filter, $380.00 for my lights, $360.00 for my rock, and about $100.00 on miscellaneous things like water bottles and heaters, food, salinity testers, fish nets, ect. All I needed to do now was let the tank cycle.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
What it took
Well what it took to get things going again was seeing the equipment I needed at the right price. I had been thinking the time was right for me to get back into the hobby and I was visiting various pet stores and asking all sorts of questions about what I needed. First thing I new I needed was a new filter because the old Magnum filter was not working and I needed to replace it, but with what? I found the largest canister filter available on sale for half price at a local store who sold salt water fish (SWF) and all the equipment needed to keep them including live rock. So I went home and started researching that canister filter and all the other things I would need to get started again and that's when I learned about live rock and how it acted ass a filter. So on August 23, 2009 I went down to the store and bought that great big filter (the Marineland 360 multi-stage canister filter), and I went home and started rinsing out all my crushed sea shell sand bed that was still in the tank the whole time it was in storage. I spent the better part of that whole weekend washing that gravel with vinegar and rinsing repeatably. I also did some research on the proper lighting I would need to keep the live rock purple and full of Coraline that I was going to be putting in. After visiting a few individuals who were selling their equipment, most of them were home made style lights or the king that you put into a great big fish tank cabinet, I decided to order a brand new hood for my tank that came with four sets of 65 watt true actinic lights and two 250 watt metal halides lights and for moon light effects it had 6 blue LED lights and to keep everything cool it had a fan built into the hood. So I ordered that hood through e-bay and bought it from a business in Texas, that was the first major purchase I had ever made through the Internet and man I was nervous. I ended up paying three hundred for the hood and eighty for tax and duty to bring it into Canada for a grand total of three hundred and eighty dollars, that same light hood was selling at one of the other pet stores for eleven hundred dollars, saving me seven hundred and twenty dollars. That next Monday I went to my nearest bottled water store and bought a couple of five gallon water bottles for twenty bucks each and started filling my fish tank with pure reverse osmosis bottled water, each water fill cost me a two bucks. After making seven trips to the water store throughout the week after work each time, my tank was darn near full and ready for some live rock and fish. That next weekend I went down to the store and bought my first round of live rock and put them into a couple of old plastic 5 gallon milk bones containers which I washed with vinegar water and rinsed thoroughly, the first round was 35lbs which I got for half price which worked out to $4.50 per pound. I ended up going back to the store two more times that day and cleaned them out of all but one or two rocks for there fish to use. In one of my trips I noticed a small little fish at the bottom of my bucket, I added her to the tank not thinking she would make it, but what the heck I had nothing to lose. I named that little fish Zena because she looked like a zebra only purple and grey. All in all I now had 80lbs of Jakarta live rock and six Mexican turbo snails, and a six lined wrasses, which the sales clerk never charged me for, all for $360.00. So my total investment up to date was $229.00 for the filter, $380.00 for my lights, $360.00 for my rock, and about $100.00 on miscellaneous things like water bottles and heaters, food, salinity testers, fish nets, ect. All I needed to do now was let the tank cycle.
Saturday, August 21, 2010
Time to Start Blogging
Well it has been almost a full year since I started my 75 gallon salt water aquarium and I think its a good time to start blogging about all the different experiences and learning lessons on this never ending journey they call " Reefer Madness". I have always had a general fascination with aquatics ever since I could remember. I can recall being absolutely mesmerized by the waterfalls and goldfish ponds at the Calgary zoo when I was a small child, and throughout my life watching aquatic life has always caused that same hypnotic behavior. It doesn't matter if I'm watching the dolphins at the west Edmonton mall or I'm visiting the Vancouver aquarium and watching the huge variety of animals they have, I have always found watching aquatic life extremely relaxing. Some of the fun times I've had with family at the Vancouver aquarium have only increased my love for aquatics, I can remember watching the Beluga whales when the kids were small and the Belugas would spit water at us, that had happened more than a few times and they say its good luck to be sprayed by the whales.
Anyways when I had my small business in Vancouver I acquired a 75gal tank in which I set up in the front office with fish only. Back then I was far to busy to look after that sort of thing and I had little time to learn, so I hired J&L Aquatics (who were not far away) to come every other week to clean the tank up, test the water, change whatever filter media needed changing, and perform whatever maintenance required, and they did a great job of that. As time went on and things changed and moves happened I ended up having to take down that tank, however I continued to bring it along with me every time I moved knowing some day I would get another opportunity get it up and running again. Now it's fifteen years later and I have settled nicely here in Kelowna, I can finally get started on my new hobby; salt water fish and mini reef keeping. In the year that has been I have learned so many things about this hobby and ever time I turn around sends me on a new path of learning that only leads to more learning, it's great! The one thing and probably most important thing I've learned is that it's not that hard to do, you just have to be patient and I always thought it was so much work but it really isn't that bad at all. I probably spend more time with my dog walking and things then I do with my fish tank by far, but that doesn't include the time spent just being mesmerized and relaxing in front of the tank.
Anyways when I had my small business in Vancouver I acquired a 75gal tank in which I set up in the front office with fish only. Back then I was far to busy to look after that sort of thing and I had little time to learn, so I hired J&L Aquatics (who were not far away) to come every other week to clean the tank up, test the water, change whatever filter media needed changing, and perform whatever maintenance required, and they did a great job of that. As time went on and things changed and moves happened I ended up having to take down that tank, however I continued to bring it along with me every time I moved knowing some day I would get another opportunity get it up and running again. Now it's fifteen years later and I have settled nicely here in Kelowna, I can finally get started on my new hobby; salt water fish and mini reef keeping. In the year that has been I have learned so many things about this hobby and ever time I turn around sends me on a new path of learning that only leads to more learning, it's great! The one thing and probably most important thing I've learned is that it's not that hard to do, you just have to be patient and I always thought it was so much work but it really isn't that bad at all. I probably spend more time with my dog walking and things then I do with my fish tank by far, but that doesn't include the time spent just being mesmerized and relaxing in front of the tank.
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